IC 2391


IC 2391 is an open cluster in the constellation Vela consisting of hot, young, blueish stars, some of which are binaries and one of which is a quadruple. Persian astronomer A. a.-R. al-Sufi first described it as "a nebulous star" in. It was re-found by Abbe Lacaille and cataloged as Lac II 5.

Description

IC 2391 is centred about 490 light-years away from Earth and can be seen with the naked eye. It contains about 30 stars with a total visual magnitude of 2.5, spread out across 50 arcminutes.

Member stars

These are some of the prominent members of IC 2391:
NameApparent
magnitude
Spectral typeDistance
HD 74195 3.63 variesB3/5
HD 74560 sp. binary4.815 B3IV
HD 74146 sp. binary5.19B5IV
HD 74071 5.44B5V
HD 74196 cepheid variable5.61B9/A0
HD 74535 alpha2 CVn variable5.47B9III
HD 754666.27B8V
HD 739526.43B8V
HD 74438, youngest known quadruple star.7.58A2mA5-A8

The stars' era of formation is similar to open cluster IC 2602 in neighbouring Carina, and has a lithium depletion boundary
age of about 50 million years. The latter group averages about the same distance, placed at about 485 light years away.

Argus Association

The components formed at about the same time as a nearer group, known as the "Argus Association" which one motion model suggests began in their own nebula cloud. These are in a similar direction, roughly the Vela constellation, within the local galactic arm.
The supposed association may chiefly comprise:
NameConstellationDistanceRadial velocity
Epsilon PavonisPavo105−6.7
HD 88955Vela100+7.4
HD 61005Puppis119+22