Fig. 405 shows a cluster in the Centaur, which, according to the same astronomer, is beyond comparison the richest and largest object of the kind in the heavens, the stars in it being literally innumerable. Fig. 406 shows a cluster in Scorpio, remarkable for the peculiar arrangement of its component stars.
Star clusters are especially abundant in the region of the Milky-Way, the law of their distribution being the reverse of that of the nebulæ.
Double and Multiple Stars.
347. Double Stars.—The telescope shows that many stars which appear single to the naked eye are really double, or composed of a pair of stars lying side by side. There are several pairs of stars in the heavens which lie so near together that they almost seem to touch when seen with the naked eye.
Fig. 407.
Fig. 408.
Pairs of stars are not considered double unless the components are so near together that they both appear in the field of view when examined with a telescope. In the majority of the pairs classed as double stars the distance between the components ranges from half a second to fifteen seconds.