The "Owl Cluster" - A bright open cluster of 80 stars, mag 6.4. The stars
trace out the shape of an owl 13 arc minutes across, the 2 brightest stars mark the "eyes". (110NGC)
Look for NGC 436 - a small mag 8.8 cluster of 30 stars 32 arc minutes NW.
M52 (NGC 7654)
23hr 24.2m
+61° 35'
A bright, open cluster of 100 stars, 13 arc minutes in size. Stars are easily
resolved at mag 8.4 and fainter.
M103 (NGC 581)
01hr 33.2m
+60° 42'
A smaller open cluster of 25 stars 6 arc minutes across, shining at mag. 7.4.
Stars are mag 10.6 and fainter. Appears triangular shaped.
Trumpler 1
01hr 36m
+61° 17'
A small open cluster of 20 stars not far from M103. Mag 8.1 covering
5 arc minutes of sky, stars are mag 9.6 and fainter.
NGC 7789!!
23hr 57.0m
+56° 44'
A very rich open cluster of 300 stars, visible in binoculars. 16 arc minutes
across, mag 6.7, stars are mag 10.7 and fainter. (110NGC)
NGC 129
00hr 30m
+60° 14'
Another rich open cluster of 35 stars, mag 6.5. 21 arc minutes across, stars
are mag 8.6 and fainter.
NGC 663!
01hr 46.0m
+61° 15'
A mag 7.1 open cluster of 80 stars, 16 arc minutes across. (110NGC)
Look for clusters NGC 654 and NGC 659 nearby.
A pair of faint reflection nebula near g Cass. g makes them
difficult to observe - use medium power from a dark site and use clean optics! 10 x 5 and 10 x 3 arc min.
IC 1805 and IC 1848
02hr 43m
+60° 50'
A pair of large, sprawling emission nebula. 96 x 80 and 100 x 53 arc
minutes in size. Try using a nebula filter with binoculars or finder scope from a DARK site.