Menu

Fashion Trendy
  • Drop Down

    • Abstract
    • Model
    • Techo
    • Options
  • Photography Pictures Product

    Drop Menu

    • Crystal
    • Digital
    • Graphs
    • Settings
  • Menu

    Photogallery Mag

    All data about beautiful pictures that are captured all over the world

    • Home
    • Fashion Mag
      • Men's Fashion
        • Casual Dresses
        • Shoes
      • Womens Collection
        • Dresses
        • Tops and Tees
        • Acessories
        • Makeup Room
        • Shoes
      • Kids Blog
        • Toys
        • Hair Acessories
    • All About Nature
      • Animals
        • Wild Animals
        • Pet Animals
      • Birds
        • Parrots
        • Eagle
    • Photography
    • Health and Fitness
    Go
    Home » Published » Globular Cluster Messier 79

    Globular Cluster Messier 79

    Globular Cluster Messier 79

    It�s beginning to look a lot like Christmas in this NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image of a blizzard of stars, which resembles a swirling storm in a snow globe.

    These stars make up the globular cluster Messier 79, located about 40 000 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Lepus (The Hare). Globular clusters are gravitationally bound groupings of up to one million stars. These giant �star globes� contain some of the oldest stars in our galaxy. Messier 79 is no exception; it contains about 150 000 stars, packed into an area measuring just roughly 120 light-years across.

    This 11.7-billion-year-old star cluster was first discovered by French astronomer Pierre M�chain in 1780. M�chain reported the finding to his colleague Charles Messier, who included it in his catalogue of non-cometary objects: The Messier catalogue. About four years later, using a larger telescope than Messier�s, William Herschel was able to resolve the stars in Messier 79 and described it as a �globular star cluster.�

    In this sparkling Hubble image, Sun-like stars appear yellow-white and the reddish stars are bright giants that are in the final stages of their lives. Most of the blue stars sprinkled throughout the cluster are aging �helium-burning� stars, which have exhausted their hydrogen fuel and are now fusing helium in their cores.

    Image Credit: NASA and ESA, S. Djorgovski (Caltech) and F. Ferraro (University of Bologna)
    Explanation from: https://www.spacetelescope.org/images/potw1751a/
    Published

    facebook

    twitter

    google+

    fb share

    About awais

    Related Posts
    < Previous Post Next Post >
    Powered by Blogger.

    Social Share

    Copyright Photogallery Mag 2014 . Template Created by