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Post Info TOPIC: Messier 28


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Posts: 131433
Date:
NGC 6626
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Messier 28 (also M28, NGC 6626, ESO 522-SC23 and GCL 94) is a magnitude +7.66 globular star cluster located 17,900 light-years away in the constellation Sagittarius. 

The cluster was discovered by French astronomer Charles Messier using a 8.38 cm (3.3-inch) refracting telescope at the Hôtel de Cluny (now the Musée national du Moyen Age), in Paris, France on the 27th July 1764.

Right Ascension 18h 24m 32.89s, Declination -24° 52' 11.4"

Charles Messier briefly described it as a "nebula containing no star... round, seen with difficulty in 3½-foot telescope; Diam 2'." The 2' at the end indicates an angle of two arcminutes.
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Posts: 131433
Date:
Messier 28
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Title: Variable stars in the globular cluster M28 (NGC 6626)
Authors: G. Prieto (1,2), M. Catelan (1,3), R. Contreras Ramos (1,4), B. J. Pritzl (5), H. A. Smith (6), J. Alonso-Garcia (1,3) ((1) PUC-Chile, (2) LCO-Chile, (3) MWM Nucleus-Chile, (4) Univ. Bologna, (5) UW-Oshkosh, (6) MSU)

We present a new search for variable stars in the Galactic globular cluster M28 (NGC 6626). The search is based on a series of BVI images obtained with the SMARTS Consortium's 1.3m telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, Chile. The search was carried out using the ISIS v2.2 image subtraction package. We find a total of 25 variable stars in the field of the cluster, 9 being new discoveries. Of the newly found variables, 1 is an ab-type RR Lyrae star, 6 are c-type RR Lyrae, and 2 are long-period/semi-regular variables. V22, previously classified as a type II Cepheid, appears as a bona-fide RRc in our data. In turn, V20, previously classified as an ab-type RR Lyrae, could not be properly phased with any reasonable period. The properties of the ab-type RR Lyrae stars in M28 appear most consistent with an Oosterhoff-intermediate classification, which is unusual for bona-fide Galactic globulars clusters. However, the cluster's c-type variables do not clearly support such an Oosterhoff type, and a hybrid Oosterhoff I/II system is accordingly another possibility, thus raising the intriguing possibility of multiple populations being present in M28. Coordinates, periods, and light curves in differential fluxes are provided for all the detected variables.

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