Credit & Copyright: ESA/Hubble,
NASA
Explanation:
Renown 18th century astronomer Charles Messier
described
this 9th entry in his famous astronomical
catalog as "Nebula, without star, in the right leg of Ophiuchus ...".
But Messier 9 (M9)
does have stars, known to modern astronomers as a
globular cluster
of over 300,000 stars within a diameter of about 90 light-years.
It
lies some 25,000 light-years distant, near the central
bulge of our Milky Way galaxy.
This
Hubble Space Telescope close-up
resolves the dense swarm of stars across the
cluster's central 25 light-years.
At least twice the age of the Sun and deficient in heavy elements,
the cluster stars have colors corresponding to
their temperatures,
redder stars are cooler, bluer stars are hotter.
Many of the cluster's cool red giant
stars show a yellowish tint in the sharp Hubble view.
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& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: globular cluster
Publications with words: globular cluster
See also: