by Ann » Fri Oct 07, 2011 5:10 am
That would seem to be cluster NGC 2425. The reason for the orange color is twofold. First, the cluster is old, apparently a few billion years old, which means that the bright blue stars of the clusters have died long ago, and the brightest stars of the cluster are orange. I've also found a claim that the cluster is 3550 parsecs away, which would be more than 10,000 light-years. Whether or not the exact distance is 10,000 light-years, it is clear that the cluster is far away, and we can be sure that there is a lot of interstellar dust between us and the cluster. The dust causes reddening by scattering away blue light. NGC 2425 is undoubtedly very dust-reddened, which is the main reason why it looks so strikingly red in this image.
By comparison, the same source that puts NGC 2425 at 3550 parsecs puts M46 at 1510 parsecs and M47 at 490 parsecs. Also, this same source claims that M46 is less than a billion years old, and M47 is less than a hundred million.
Ann
That would seem to be cluster NGC 2425. The reason for the orange color is twofold. First, the cluster is old, apparently a few billion years old, which means that the bright blue stars of the clusters have died long ago, and the brightest stars of the cluster are orange. I've also found a claim that the cluster is 3550 parsecs away, which would be more than 10,000 light-years. Whether or not the exact distance is 10,000 light-years, it is clear that the cluster is far away, and we can be sure that there is a lot of interstellar dust between us and the cluster. The dust causes reddening by scattering away blue light. NGC 2425 is undoubtedly very dust-reddened, which is the main reason why it looks so strikingly red in this image.
By comparison, the same source that puts NGC 2425 at 3550 parsecs puts M46 at 1510 parsecs and M47 at 490 parsecs. Also, this same source claims that M46 is less than a billion years old, and M47 is less than a hundred million.
Ann