NGC 7031 (also OCL 210) is a magnitude +9.1 open cluster located 2935 light-years away in the constellation Cygnus. The brightest central star is magnitude +11.3
The cluster was discovered by German-British astronomer William Herschel using a 47.5 cm (18.7 inch) f/13 speculum reflector at Windsor Road, Slough, on the 21 September 1788.
Right Ascension 21h 07m 12.5s, Declination +50° 52' 12"
Title: BV photometry of a possible open star cluster pair NGC 7031/NGC 7086 Authors: Valentin Kopchev, Georgy Petrov
We present a CCD BV photometry of the possible binary open star cluster NGC 7031/NGC 7086. The aim is to confirm or disprove their common nature on the grounds of their age and distance. An age of 224 ± 25 Myr and distance 831 ± 72 pc was determined for NGC 7031 and 178 ± 25 Myr, 955 ± 84 pc for NGC 7086, respectively. Based on these differences in age and distance we conclude that the two clusters are most likely not formed together from one and the same Giant Molecular Cloud and thus are not a true binary cluster.