Hi Marc, Trevor & All,
Trevor asked me by private message
prior to Marc's attempt at identifying the two small clusters on the left and right edges of the image, to I.D them.
From my observing notes, Megastar v5.0 and after having a bit of a quick poke around SIMBAD I can confirm the identification of NGC 121 on the right-hand side, -- but I'm pretty certain the cluster on the left is
not NGC 152.
Instead, I believe it to be Kron 3. It is clearly shown on the DSS at (approx -- my position from Megastar) RA 00 24 46.5 Dec -72 47 35. I have a (1996) recorded visual observation of it with 25cm and I'm a little surprised more people don't notice it being not a lot fainter than NGC 121. It is however rarely (if ever) marked on commercial planetarium software. Megastar 5.0 does not I.D it.
Kron 3 (AKA ESO 28-19 & Lindsay 8) was once believed to be an SMC G.C. However more recent studies (in the last 10-odd years) indicate Kron 3's metallicity and age are not indicative of being a globular. It is now strongly believed to be an intermediate age (6.5-7.0 gyr old), quite evolved but very populous open or galactic cluster.
http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/si...ame=ESO++28-19
Perhaps even more interestingly, the image also shows Kron 7 (ESO 28-22 & Lindsay 11), a much smaller and fainter smudge directly "up" from Kron 3 and just above a 14th mag star. This too was once thought to be an SMC globular but is now also strongly believed to be an aged, populous O.C. It too is visible with 25cm but
extremely faint.
http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/si...bmit=submit+id
Nice image BTW!
Best,
Les D