The cluster has an estimated core radius of 2.67 pc and a 90% light radius of 13.83 pc,[1] with a combined mass of around 13,500 times the mass of the Sun.[5] Age estimates for the cluster range from 25[7] to 40[6] million years. Given this, most stars with a mass equal to the Sun or less are still on the pre-main-sequence. The average stellar metallicity – what astronomers term the abundance of elements with higher atomic number than helium – is −0.4, or about 10−0.4 ≈ 40% of the abundance in the Sun.[4]
There appear to be two distinct stellar populations in the cluster with the more blue (hotter) stars showing slower rotation rates than the redder (cooler) stars.[6] The frequency of binary star systems in the cluster increases with distance from the core, which is the opposite of the normal trend for globular clusters. This may be explained by interactions with other stars in the denser core disrupting binary systems, before mass segregation of the cluster has begun to take effect.[5] The cluster contains few if any blue stragglers, which are the result of stellar mergers.[7]