from The 110 Messier objects
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2015
Degree of difficulty 2 (of 5)
Minimum aperture Naked eye
Designation NGC 6254
Type Globular cluster
Class VII
Distance 24,750 ly (Hipparcos, 2001)
Size 140 ly
Constellation Ophiuchus
R.A. 16h 57.1min
Decl. −4° 6′
Magnitude 6.6
Surface brightness –
Apparent diameter 19′
Discoverer Messier, 1764
History Charles Messier discovered M 10 on the 29th of May 1764, just a night after its fainter neighbor M 9, and a night before he found its close neighbor M 12. He observed “a nebula without star” and added: “This nebula is beautiful & round; one can see it only with difficulty in a simple refractor of 3 ft. 4′ diameter.”
20 years later, William Herschel's telescope showed “A very beautiful, and extremely compressed, cluster of stars” and no trace of nebulosity. Herschel compared M 10 with M 53. His son John wrote in 1831: “A superb cluster of very compressed stars, gradually brighter toward the middle. The stars are of 10th to 15th magnitude, and run up to a blaze in the center, but I see no nucleus. Diameter about 6′; a noble object.”
Admiral Smyth used a 5.9-inch refractor and saw a “rich globular cluster of compressed stars. This noble phenomenon is of a lucid white tint, somewhat attenuated at the margin, and clustering to a blaze in the center. Easily resolved with medium magni. cation.” Lord Rosse reported, after his observation with his giant telescope: “A dark lane above the center quite across, or rather the upper one-sixth of cluster is much fainter than the rest.”
The description of Curtis, based on his photographs, says: “Fine bright globular cluster, diameter about 8'. Central brighter part about 2′.”
Astrophysics With a distance of 24,750 lightyears, M 10 is a little farther away than its close neighbor M 12, and its true diameter of 140 light-years is larger than the latter's.
With about 250,000 solar masses, M 10 is a rather average globular cluster.
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