Hubble detects a cosmic snow globe of stars
December 5th, 2008 - 1:56 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Dec 5 (ANI): The Hubble Space Telescope has detected hundreds of thousands of stars moving about in the globular cluster M13, just like a whirl of shiny flakes sparkling in a snow globe.
M13 is home to over 100,000 stars and located at a distance of 25,000 light-years.
This glittering metropolis of stars in the globular cluster is easily found in the winter sky in the constellation Hercules and can even be glimpsed with the unaided eye under dark skies.
These stars are packed so closely together in a ball, approximately 150 light-years across, that they will spend their entire lives whirling around in the cluster.
Near the core of this cluster, the density of stars is about a hundred times greater than the density in the neighborhood of our sun.
These stars are so crowded that they can, at times, slam into each other and even form a new star, called a blue straggler.
The brightest reddish stars in the cluster are ancient red giants. These aging stars have expanded to many times their original diameters and cooled.
The blue-white stars are the hottest in the cluster.
Globular clusters can be found spread largely in a vast halo around our galaxy. M13 is one of nearly 150 known globular clusters surrounding our Milky Way galaxy.
Globular clusters have some of the oldest stars in the universe. They likely formed before the disk of our Milky Way, so they are older than nearly all other stars in our galaxy.
Studying globular clusters therefore tells us about the history of our galaxy. (ANI)
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Tags: blue straggler, constellation hercules, dark skies, density, diameters, globular cluster, globular clusters, hubble space telescope, hundred times, hundreds of thousands, light years, metropolis, milky way galaxy, new star, red giants, snow globe, stars in the universe, unaided eye, whirl, winter sky