| NGC 5617 | |
|---|---|
NGC 5617 (taken with Stellarium) | |
| Observation data (J2000epoch) | |
| Right ascension | 14h 29m 44s[1] |
| Declination | −60° 42′ 42″[1] |
| Distance | 5,770ly (1,769pc[2]) |
| Apparent magnitude (V) | 6.3[1] |
| Apparent dimensions (V) | 10' |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Estimated age | 82 Myr[3] |
| Other designations | Cr 282,Mel 125 |
| Associations | |
| Constellation | Centaurus |
| See also:Open cluster,List of open clusters | |
NGC 5617 is anopen cluster in the constellationCentaurus. NGC 5617 forms a binary open cluster withTrumpler 22. It lies one degree west-northwest ofAlpha Centauri.

It was discovered byJames Dunlop in 1826. He described it on May 8, 1826 as "a cluster of small stars of mixed magnitudes, considerably congregated towards the centre, 4' or 5' in diametre" and added it to his catalog as number 302.John Herschel described as "Class IV object, very rich; irregularly round; pretty much compressed in the middle but scattered at borders; 15'; there are three stars of 10th magnitude, 5 or 6 stars of 11th magnitude; the rest below 11th" and added it to General Catalogue as No. 3570. In theNew General Catalogue it is described as "large (10'), richer in stars to the west (about 80 total), with a compressed middle. It contains stars of magnitude 8 and fainter."[4]
NGC 5617 is located nearly 2 kpc (6.500 light years) away from Earth, at the further border ofCarina-Sagittarius arm.[5] Variousphotometric studies have produced different results concerning the age and the distance of the cluster; Moffat & Vogt (1975) studied and calculated a distance of 1.34 kpc from the Sun, Haug (1978) found its distance to be 1.82 kpc, aCCD photometry by Kjeldsen & Frandsen (1991) found the distance to be 2.05 ± 0.2 kpc and the age 70 Myr and Carra & Munari (2004) used BVI photometry to obtain reddening EB−V= 0.48 ± 0.05, age of 80 Myr, and a distance of 2.0 ± 0.3 kpc.[6] De Silva et al. (2015) calculated its distance at 2.1 ± 0.3 kpc.[7] Bisht et al. found an age of 90 ± 10 Myr and aparallax-derived distance of 2.43 ± 0.08 kpc, in good agreement with isochrone-derived values.[8]
There are 175 probable member stars within the angular radius of the cluster and 65 within the central part of the cluster. The tidal radius of the cluster is 7.4 - 10.2 parsecs (24 - 33 light years) and represents the average outer limit of NGC 5617, beyond which a star is unlikely to remain gravitationally bound to the cluster core.[2] Oneblue straggler is a possible member of the cluster.[5] Other possible members of the cluster aredelta Scuti variable,gamma Doradus variable andeclipsing variable stars.[9]
NGC 5617, along with its companion Trumpler 22, appear to bedynamically relaxed, with massive stars concentrated near the center and less massive stars in the periphery.[8]
NGC 5617 appears to be gravitationally bound to Trumpler 22.[10] The two clusters share similar radial velocities (-38.63 ± 2.25 km/s for NGC 5617 and -38.46 ± 2.08 km/s for Trumpler 22), meanmetallicity (-0.18 ± 0.02 for NGC 5617 and-0.17 ± 0.04 for Trumpler 22), similarabundances across various elements, and have similar age, forming a primordial binary cluster pair.[7] Their orbits were initially almost circular and their separation less than 20 pc.[10]