NGC 3603

Open cluster in the constellation Carina


title: "NGC 3603" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["ngc-3603", "carina-(constellation)", "h-ii-regions", "ngc-objects", "star-forming-regions", "carina–sagittarius-arm"] description: "Open cluster in the constellation Carina" topic_path: "general/ngc-3603" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_3603" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Open cluster in the constellation Carina ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox nebula"]

FieldValue
nameNGC 3603
image[[File:Stellar nursery NGC 3603.jpg
captionNGC 3603 in visible and near infrared light
typeGiant molecular cloud
type2H II region
epochJ2000
ra
dec
dist_pc6,900
appmag_v9.1
appdia12.0'
constellationCarina
namesGum 38b, Collinder 244, RCW 57
::

|name = NGC 3603 |image = [[File:Stellar nursery NGC 3603.jpg|300px]] |caption = NGC 3603 in visible and near infrared light |credit = |type = Giant molecular cloud |type2 = H II region |epoch = J2000 |subtype = |class = |ra = |dec = |dist_ly = |dist_pc = 6,900 |dist_z = |appmag_v = 9.1 |appdia = 12.0' |size_v = |constellation = Carina |radius_ly = |radius_pc = |dimensions = |absmag_v = |notes = |names = Gum 38b, Collinder 244, RCW 57 NGC 3603 is a nebula situated in the Carina–Sagittarius Arm of the Milky Way around 20,000 light-years away from the Solar System. It is a massive H II region containing a very compact open cluster (probably a super star cluster) HD 97950.

Observations

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bb/Star_formation_in_the_southern_Milky_Way.jpg" caption="NGC 3603 (left) and [[NGC 3576]] are star formation regions in the southern [[Milky Way]]."] ::

NGC 3603 was observed by John Herschel on 14 March 1834 during his visit to South Africa, who remarked that it was "a very remarkable object...perhaps a globular cluster". Herschel catalogued it as nebula 3334 in his Results of Astronomical Observations made at the Cape of Good Hope, published in 1847. In 1864 the Royal Society published his General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters, where he listed it as number 2354. It was subsequently incorporated into the New General Catalogue as by J. L. E. Dreyer as NGC 3603.{{cite journal |last=Sher |first=D. |title=The Curious History of NGC 3603 |journal=Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada |volume=59 |pages=67–70 |year=1965 |bibcode=1965JRASC..59...67S}}

The central cluster was catalogued as the star HD 97950, but has long been recognised as nebulous or multiple.

Features

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9e/NGC_3603_Cluster.jpg" caption="ISAAC instrument at the ANTU telescope"] ::

NGC 3603 is the most massive visible cloud of glowing gas and plasma, known as a H II region, in the Milky Way. The central star cluster is the densest concentration of very massive stars known in the galaxy. Strong ultraviolet radiation and stellar winds have cleared the gas and dust, giving an unobscured view of the cluster.

Three prominent Wolf–Rayet stars have been detected within the cluster, all originally unresolved and known as the single star HD 97950. The brightest of the three, HD 97950A1 (or NGC 3603-A1) is actually a pair of Wolf–Rayet stars that orbit around each other once every 3.77 days. The primary is an estimated mass , while its companion is . The star designated HD 97950B is a single star more massive and more luminous than either of the individual members of HD 97950A1. It is 2,880,000 times as luminous as the sun and 132 times as massive.

NGC 3603 is visible in the telescope as a small rather insignificant nebulosity with a yellowish tinge due to the effects of interstellar absorption. In the mid-1960s, optical studies combined with radio astronomical observations showed it to be an extremely strong thermal radio source. Later observations of other galaxies introduced the concept of starburst regions, in some cases whole galaxies, of extremely rapid star formation. NGC 3603 is now considered to be such a region, and it has been compared by some authors to the larger cluster 30 Doradus, in the Large Magellanic Cloud.

Sher 25, a B class supergiant, has long been thought to be a member of NGC 3603, but turns out to be a foreground star. is surrounded by ejected material in an hourglass shape similar to that found for the supernova 1987A, and this has aroused intense interest in the future evolution of stars such as Sher 25.

Two of the most luminous young stars known are found within NGC 3603, but outside the central cluster. WR 42e and NGC 3603 MTT 58 both have a spectral type of O2If*/WN6 indicating an extremely massive young star. WR 42e is a possible runaway from a three-body encounter, while MTT 58 appears to still be embedded within its parental cocoon and is in a possible binary with an O3If star.

::data[format=table title="Prominent stars"]

MDS numberMTT numberOther namesSpectral typemVMVTemperatureLuminosityReference
30(A1)WR 43a (HSW 1)WN6h/WN6h11.18−7.842,000/40,0002,455,000/1,514,000last1=Moffat
31(A2)HSW 4O3V12.53−6.946,5001,500,000
26(A3)HSW 5O3III13.09−6.446,500863,000
23(B)WR 43b (HSW 2)WN6h11.33−7.942,0002,884,000
18(C)WR 43c (HSW 3)WN6h11.89−7.344,0002,239,000
49(D1)O4V12.64−6.344,000last1=Massey
50(D2)O5V12.74−6.241,000
52(D3)O4V13.68−5.244,000
19(E)MMM 104O5.5III(f)12.83−6.141,0001,038,000bibcode=2008AJ....135..878M
39(F)6O5V11.86−6.141,000
61(G)10O5V12.74−641,000
58WR 43-2O2If*/WN614.76−5.7855,000
WR 42eO2If*/WN614.53−6.31,300,000last1=Roman-Lopes
29O4V13.68−5.244,000
27O4V13.07−5.844,000
25O4V13.01−5.944,000
40O3V13.33−5.746,500718,000
33O5V+OB?13.69−5.8
41O4V14.24−5.144,000217,000
42O3III12.99−6.146,500946,000
37O6.5V+?14.16−5
38O3V13.21−5.946,500497,000
16O3V13.53−5.446,500655,000
43MMM 111O4V13.87−544,000
14O4V13.88−544,000
59O4V13.65−5.344,000
60O4V13.6−5.344,000
62O4V13.09−5.644,000
58MMM 101O6.5V((f))14.02−5.137,000238,000
5123Sher 56O4V(f)13.33−5.644,000
9MMM 108O5.5V13.71−5.539,500377,000
726Sher 64O4V13.58−5.444,000863,000
2217Sher 57O5III(f)13.23−5.841,000787,000
112Sher 23OC9.7Ia12.7−6.330,250413,000
218Sher 22O3III(f)13.21−5.646,500863,000
4814Sher 18O3.5If12.65−6.439,5001,644,000
2411Sher 47O4V12.72−6.244,0001,644,000
20O4V13.9844,000
7639Sher 54O6V14.57−4.638,300150,000
17MMM 116O4V14.144,000
36O6V14.52−4.238,300114,000
45O8V-III14.14−4.733,700114,000
441Sher 49O7.5V14.67−4.634,800114,000
57O4V13.9844,000
10MMM 117O6V14.17−5.138,300238,000
332Sher 24O6V14.27−538,300217,000
51Sher 27O7.5V15.04−434,80065,000
15Sher 63O3.5III(f)13.41−5.645,000597,000
6340Sher 53O8.5V14.47−4.832,700125,000
73MMM 102O8.5V15.32−3.932,70050,000
47Sher 21O6V((f))14.75−4.638,300150,000
25Sher 19O3V12.61−6.246,500497,000
MMM 103O3V((f))13.09−5.746,500718,000
MMM 109O7V13.85−4.936,000180,000
::

References

References

  1. (2013). "Global survey of star clusters in the Milky Way. II. The catalogue of basic parameters". Astronomy & Astrophysics.
  2. (2013). "On the Origin of Mass Segregation in NGC 3603". The Astrophysical Journal.
  3. (1988). "The complete new general catalogue and index catalogues of nebulae and star clusters by J. L. E. Dreyer". Cambridge: Sky Publishing Corporation and Cambridge University Press.
  4. (2008). "The Initial Mass Function of the Massive Star-forming Region NGC 3603 from Near-Infrared Adaptive Optics Observations". The Astrophysical Journal.
  5. (1999). "VLT/ISAAC and HST/WFPC2 observations of NGC 3603". The Messenger.
  6. (1995). "The Dense Galactic Starburst NGC 3603. I. HST/FOS Spectroscopy of Individual Stars in the Core and the source of Ionization and Kinetic Energy". Astronomical Journal.
  7. (2010). "The R136 star cluster hosts several stars whose individual masses greatly exceed the accepted 150 M stellar mass limit". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
  8. (1989). "The galactic giant H II region NGC 3603". Astronomy and Astrophysics.
  9. Weßmayer, D.. (2023-09-01). "The blue supergiant Sher 25 revisited in the Gaia era". Astronomy and Astrophysics.
  10. (2008). "The blue supergiant Sher 25 and its intriguing hourglass nebula". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
  11. (2013). "An O2 If*/WN6 star caught in the act in a compact H II region in the starburst cluster NGC 3603". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
  12. (1994). "NGC 3603 and its Wolf–Rayet stars: Galactic clone of R136 at the core of 30 Doradus, but without the massive surrounding cluster halo". Astrophysical Journal.
  13. (2005). "The Physical Properties and Effective Temperature Scale of O-Type Stars as a Function of Metallicity. II. Analysis of 20 More Magellanic Cloud Stars and Results from the Complete Sample". The Astrophysical Journal.
  14. (2008). "The Massive Star Content of NGC 3603". The Astronomical Journal.
  15. (2012). "A Galactic O2 If*/WN6 star possibly ejected from its birthplace in NGC 3603". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

ngc-3603carina-(constellation)h-ii-regionsngc-objectsstar-forming-regionscarina–sagittarius-arm