Coma Star Cluster

Coma Star Cluster

From StarDate by Billy Henry

April 14, 2026 · 2 min

About this episode

This episode discusses the Coma star cluster and the challenges astronomers face in identifying its member stars.

Astronomers love star clusters. All the stars in a cluster were born at the same time, from the same cloud of gas and dust. So any differences in the stars are the result of their evolution, which is a result of their mass. That makes it easier to learn what’s going on inside the stars. One problem, though, is identifying which stars belong to a cluster. It takes detailed measurements of motion and brightness to separate members of the cluster from stars that just happen to line up in the same direction. An example is the Coma star cluster, in Coma Berenices. The constellation is in the east at nightfall. Under dark skies, the cluster is a good target for binoculars. The cluster is about 280 light-years away. But it spans dozens of light-years, so its stars are spread out. That makes it harder to pick out its members. And it takes big telescopes to pick out its fainter stars. So despite decades of study, astronomers are still locking down the census of stars in the Coma cluster. A study about a decade ago confirmed eight small, faint members – the first of their kind known to belong to the cluster. And another study found that about a quarter of the stars in the…

People in this episode

Host: Damond Benningfield

Topics covered

  • star clusters
  • astronomy
  • Coma star cluster
  • stellar evolution

Keywords

  • Coma Berenices
  • light-years
  • binary stars
  • multi-star systems

Mentioned in this episode

Places: Coma Star Cluster, Coma, Coma Berenices

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