This NASA Hubble Space Telescope image features a
dense and dazzling array of blazing stars that form globular cluster ESO
591-12.
NASA, ESA, and D. Massari (INAF — Osservatorio di
Astrofisica e Scienza dello Spazio); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic
University of America)
A previously unexplored globular cluster
glitters with multicolored stars in this NASA Hubble Space Telescope image.
Globular clusters like this one, called ESO 591-12 or Palomar 8, are spherical
collections of tens of thousands to millions of stars tightly bound together by
gravity. Globular clusters generally form early in the galaxies’ histories in
regions rich in gas and dust. Since the stars form from the same cloud of gas
as it collapses, they typically hover around the same age. Strewn across this
image of ESO 591-12 are a number of red and blue stars. The colors indicate
their temperatures; red stars are cooler, while the blue stars are hotter.
Hubble captured the data used to create
this image of ESO 591-12 as part of a study intended to resolve individual
stars of the entire globular cluster system of the Milky Way. Hubble
revolutionized the study of globular clusters since earthbound telescopes are
unable to distinguish individual stars in the compact clusters. The study is
part of the Hubble Missing Globular Clusters Survey, which targets 34 confirmed
Milky Way globular clusters that Hubble has yet to observe.
The program aims to provide complete observations of ages and distances for all of the Milky Way’s globular clusters and investigate fundamental properties of still-unexplored clusters in the galactic bulge or halo. The observations will provide key information on the early stages of our galaxy, when globular clusters formed.
Source: Hubble Observations Give “Missing” Globular Cluster Time to Shine - NASA Science
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