This intermediate–age cluster is located in or beyond the Perseus Arm of the Milky Way galaxy.[7] It is situated near dark nebulae, resulting in significant levels of extinction due to interstellar dust. The cluster has a core radius of 2.0′±0.4′ and a cluster radius of 8.0′±0.5′. At an estimated distance of 3.22 kpc this corresponds to a physical core radius of 6.1 ly and a cluster radius of 24.5 ly.[2] It has an estimated age of 759 million years.[1] The cluster is mildly metal deficient, matching the metallicity gradient of the Milky Way.[7]
^ abcZdanavičius, Justas; et al. (January 2010), "IC 361, a distant intermediate-age cluster in Camelopardalis†", Star clusters: basic galactic building blocks throughout time and space, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, IAU Symposium, vol. 266, pp. 557–560, Bibcode:2010IAUS..266..557Z, doi:10.1017/S1743921309992080.
Piccirillo, J.; Stein, W. L. (August 1978), "Preliminary photometry of the open cluster IC 361.", Astronomical Journal, 83: 971–974, Bibcode:1978AJ.....83..971P, doi:10.1086/112277.