| Right Ascension | 07 : 41.8 (h:m) |
|---|---|
| Declination | -14 : 49 (deg:m) |
| Distance | 5.4 (kly) |
| Visual Brightness | 6.0 (mag) |
| Apparent Dimension | 27.0 (arc min) |
| Discovered by | Charles Messier Feb 19th 1771 |
M46 was the first object Messier discovered after he had published the first edition of his list (M1-M45), on February 19, 1771, three days after presenting it to the academy.
The cluster is very rich, with 150 stars of mag 10-13 and probably a total population of over 500. The brightest of these stars are of spectral type A0, and each about 100 times more luminous than the Sun (the brightest is of apparent magnitude 8.7). This indicates an age of about 300 million years. The members are scattered over an angular diameter of about 27', corresponding to a linear extension of 30 light years at the cluster's distance of 5,400 light years, and are receding from us at 41.4 km/sec, according to Baade. M46 is classified as of Trumpler type II,2,r.
As a special and famous feature which is also obvious in our photograph, a planetary nebula (NGC 2438, also FC 87) appears within the apparent borders of M46. However, this nebula is most probably not a true member but is superimposed, or perhaps a passing "guest", because of three reasons:
Messier observed M46 February 19th, 1771 "Cluster of very faint stars between the head of Canis Major and the two rear hoofs of Monoceros..." Charles Messier
Close by: M47
Courtesy www.seds.org