Lying just at the limit of human perception is a picturesque starfield
containing one of the larger open clusters on the northern sky. Spanning
an angle larger than the Moon, M39's relatively few stars lie only
about 800 light years distant toward the constellation of Cygnus. The
above picture of M39 is a mosaic of 33 images taken by the WIYN
telescope on Kitt Peak in Arizona, USA.
The stars in M39 are all about 300 million years old, much younger than
the 5,000 million years of our Sun. Open clusters, also called galactic
clusters, contain fewer and younger stars than globular clusters. Also
unlike globular clusters, open clusters are generally confined to the
plane of our Galaxy.


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