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Credit & Copyright: Johan B. Monell  
 
Explanation:
Globular clusters once ruled the   
Milky Way.   
  
Back in the old days, back when our Galaxy first formed,  
perhaps thousands of globular clusters roamed   
our Galaxy.   
  
Today, there are less than 200 left.   
  
Over the eons,   
many globular clusters were destroyed by repeated fateful encounters with each other  
or the Galactic center.   
  
Surviving relics are older than any   
Earth fossil,   
older than any other structures in our Galaxy,   
and limit the universe itself in raw age.   
  
There are few, if any,   
young globular clusters in our   
Milky Way Galaxy because   
conditions are not ripe for more to form.  
  
The featured video shows what it might   
look like to go from the Earth to the globular cluster   
Terzan 5,   
ending with   
a picture   
of the cluster taken with the  
Hubble Space Telescope.   
  
This   
star cluster   
has been    
found to contain not only stars formed in the early days of our   
Milky Way Galaxy,   
but also,   
quite surprisingly,   
others that formed in a separate burst of star formation about 7 billion years later.   
  
  
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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: