's data. The open clusters were hidden by the dust in the Milky Way. Credit
ESO. The prominent open cluster the
Pleiades, in the constellation Taurus, has been recognized as a group of stars since antiquity, while the Hyades (which also form part of
Taurus) is one of the oldest open clusters. Other open clusters were noted by early astronomers as unresolved fuzzy patches of light. In his
Almagest, the Roman astronomer
Ptolemy mentions the
Praesepe Cluster, the
Double Cluster in
Perseus, the
Coma Star Cluster and the
Ptolemy Cluster, while the Persian astronomer
Al-Sufi wrote of the
Omicron Velorum cluster. The first person to use a telescope to observe the night sky and record his observations was the Italian scientist
Galileo Galilei in 1609. When he turned the telescope toward some of the nebulous patches recorded by Ptolemy, he found they were not a single star, but groupings of many stars. For Praesepe, he found more than 40 stars. Where previously observers had noted only 6–7 stars in the Pleiades, he found almost 50. In his 1610 treatise
Sidereus Nuncius, Galileo Galilei wrote, "the galaxy is nothing else but a mass of innumerable stars planted together in clusters." Influenced by Galileo's work, the Sicilian astronomer
Giovanni Hodierna became possibly the first astronomer to use a telescope to find previously undiscovered open clusters. In 1654, he identified the objects now designated
Messier 41,
Messier 47,
NGC 2362 and
NGC 2451. It was realized as early as 1767 that the stars in a cluster were physically related, when English naturalist Reverend
John Michell calculated that the probability of even just one group of stars like the Pleiades being the result of a chance alignment as seen from Earth was just 1 in 496,000. Between 1774 and 1781, French astronomer
Charles Messier published a catalogue of celestial objects that had a nebulous appearance similar to
comets. This catalogue included 26 open clusters. In the 1790s, English astronomer
William Herschel began an extensive study of nebulous celestial objects. He discovered that many of these features could be resolved into groupings of individual stars. Herschel conceived the idea that stars were initially scattered across space, but later became clustered together as star systems because of gravitational attraction. He divided the nebulae into eight classes, with classes VI through VIII being used to classify clusters of stars. , an open
star cluster in the
Small Magellanic Cloud The number of clusters known continued to increase under the efforts of astronomers. Hundreds of open clusters were listed in the
New General Catalogue, first published in 1888 by the Danish–Irish astronomer
J. L. E. Dreyer, and the two supplemental
Index Catalogues, published in 1896 and 1905. Telescopic observations revealed two distinct types of clusters, one of which contained thousands of stars in a regular spherical distribution and was found all across the sky but preferentially towards the center of the
Milky Way. The other type consisted of a generally sparser population of stars in a more irregular shape. These were generally found in or near the
galactic plane of the Milky Way. Astronomers dubbed the former
globular clusters, and the latter open clusters. Because of their location, open clusters are occasionally referred to as
galactic clusters, a term that was introduced in 1925 by the Swiss-American astronomer
Robert Julius Trumpler. Micrometer measurements of the positions of stars in clusters were made as early as 1877 by the German astronomer
E. Schönfeld and further pursued by the American astronomer
E. E. Barnard prior to his death in 1923. No indication of stellar motion was detected by these efforts. However, in 1918 the Dutch–American astronomer
Adriaan van Maanen was able to measure the proper motion of stars in part of the Pleiades cluster by comparing photographic plates taken at different times. As
astrometry became more accurate, cluster stars were found to share a common
proper motion through space. By comparing the photographic plates of the Pleiades cluster taken in 1918 with images taken in 1943, van Maanen was able to identify those stars that had a
proper motion similar to the mean motion of the cluster, and were therefore more likely to be members.
Spectroscopic measurements revealed common
radial velocities, thus showing that the clusters consist of stars bound together as a group. The first
color–magnitude diagrams of open clusters were published by
Ejnar Hertzsprung in 1911, giving the plot for the Pleiades and
Hyades star clusters. He continued this work on open clusters for the next twenty years. From spectroscopic data, he was able to determine the upper limit of internal motions for open clusters, and could estimate that the total mass of these objects did not exceed several hundred times the mass of the Sun. He demonstrated a relationship between the star colors and their magnitudes, and in 1929 noticed that the Hyades and
Praesepe clusters had different stellar populations than the Pleiades. This would subsequently be interpreted as a difference in ages of the three clusters. ==Formation==