Abstract
At visual inspection of objective-prism plates one frequently detects a pair or higher multiple of apparently identical stellar spectra so close together that they form a conspicuous configuration for the eye. An attempt to analyse this type of objects has given no positive indication that it should be identified with any unique physical phenomenon. A series of explanations is presented. A minor fraction of the objects may constitute widely separated binary components, the identity of which is physically conditioned by the process of formation. For the majority, however, it seems more probable that they form parts of cluster remnants or very small clusters, and that the coincidence of the spectral types is in the first instance to consider as a fortunate random effect that facilitates the detection of the hidden cluster. Although there are several interpretations of the appearance of such ‘miniclusters’, I find it particularly important to take the possibility into consideration that the number of open clusters (and associations) may be considerably greater than one has hitherto assumed—from observational as well as from theoretical point of view.
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