Kemble’s Cascade of Stars ©
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Kemble’s Cascade of Stars ©
Kemble's Cascade // AstroNumpty
Kemble's Cascade is an asterism, an unrelated collection of stars that appears to flow down into the open cluster NGC 1502 (lower left).
Kemble's Cascade
Credit: Walter MacDonald
Explanation: A picturesque chain of unrelated stars is visible with strong binoculars towards the constellation of Camelopardalis. Known as Kemble's Cascade, the asterism contains about 20 stars nearly in a row stretching over five times the width of a full moon. Made popular by astronomy enthusiast Lucian Kemble (1922-1999), these stars appear as a string only from our direction in the Milky Way Galaxy. The above photograph of Kemble's Cascade was made with a small telescope in New Mexico, USA. The bright object near the bottom left is the relatively compact open cluster of stars known as NGC 1502.
The grouping of stars known as Kemble's Cascade. You could say it's a... stellar line up!