Known to Aratos 260 B.C.
This famous cluster, Messier 44 (M44, NGC 2632), is also called
Praesepe (Latin for "manger"), or the Beehive cluster. It is also one of
the objects easily visible to the naked eye, and thus known since
prehistoric times. Some ancient lore is associated with it: Greeks and
Romans saw this "nebula" as the manger (Greek: Phatne) associated with
two asses who eat from it, Asellus Borealis, the Northern Ass (Gamma
Cnc; Spectral type A1 V, mag 4.7, distance 155 ly) and Asellus
Australis, the Southern Ass (Delta Cnc; Spectrum K0 III, mag 3.9,
distance 155 ly). Erathosthenes reported that these were the asses on
which the gods Dionysos and Silenus rode into the battle against the
Titans, who were frightened by the animals' braying so that the gods
won. As a reward, the asses were put in sky together with Phatne.
Aratos
(260 B.C.) mentioned this object as "Little Mist",
Hipparchus (130 B.C.) included this object in his star catalog and
called it "Little Cloud" or "Cloudy Star."
Ptolemy
mentions it as one of
seven "nebulae" he noted in his Almagest, and describes it as "The
Nebulous Mass in the Breast (of Cancer)". According to Burnham, it
appeared on Johann Bayer's chart (about 1600 A.D.) as "Nubilum"
("Cloudy" Object).
Galileo
has first resolved this "nebulous" object, and reported: "The nebula
called Praesepe, which is not one star only, but a mass of more than 40
small stars." It was probably later seen and partly resolved in 1611 by
Peiresc,
the discoverer of the
Orion Nebula (M42), and observed as a cluster by
Simon Marius
in 1612.
Charles
Messier added it to
his
catalog on March 4, 1769.
With larger telescopes, more than 200 of the 350 stars in the cluster
area have been confirmed as members (by their common motion). Some
others are foreground or background stars, and others may not yet have
been determined.
According to the new determination by ESA's astrometric satellite
Hipparcos, the cluster is 577 light years distant (previous estimates
have been at 522 light years), and its age was estimated at about 730
million years. Curiously, both this age and the direction of proper
motion of M44 coincide with that of the
Hyades,
another famous naked-eye and longly known cluster, which however was
neither included in Messier's list nor in the NGC and IC catalogs, which
is currently estimated at an age of about 790 million years (older
estimates had given, for both clusters in each case, an age of 400 and
660 million years). Probably these two clusters, although now separated
by hundreds of light years, have a common origin in some great diffuse
gaseous nebula which existed 700 to 800 million years ago. Consequently,
also the stellar populations are similar, both containing red giants
(M44 at least 5 of them) and some white dwarfs.
M44 also contains one peculiar blue star. Among its members, there is
the eclipsing binary TX Cancri, the metal line star Epsilon Cancri, and
several Delta Scuti variables of magnitudes 7-8, in an early
post-main-sequence state. Look at our
list of the
brightest stars of M44.
The Praesaepe cluster was classified by Trumpler as of class I,2,r
(according to Kenneth Glyn Jones), as II,2,m by the Sky Catalog 2000,
and as class II,2,r by Götz.
As mentioned in the description for the
Orion Nebula M42,
it is a bit unusual that Messier added the Praesepe cluster (together
with the Orion Nebula
M42/M43 and
the Pleiades M45)
to his catalog, and will perhaps
stay subject
to speculation.