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> Omega Centauri seen by Hubble space telescope

Omega Centauri seen by Hubble space telescope

author: Nasa/Hubble heritage team/Novapix

reference: a-agb51-39002

Image Size 300 DPI: 12 * 12 cm

Astronomers have used NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to peer into the center of a dense swarm of stars called Omega Centauri. Located some 17,000 light-years from Earth, Omega Centauri is a massive globular star cluster, containing several million stars swirling in locked orbits around a common center of gravity. The stars are packed so densely in the cluster's core that it is difficult for ground-based telescopes to make out individual stars. Omega Centauri is so large in our sky that only a small part of it fits within the field of view of the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) on the Hubble Space Telescope. Yet even this tiny patch contains some 50,000 stars, all packed into a region only about 13 light-years wide. For comparison, a similarly sized region centered on the Sun would contain about a half dozen stars. The vast majority of stars in this Hubble image are faint, yellow-white dwarf stars similar to our Sun. The handful of bright yellow-orange stars are red giants that have begun to exhaust their nuclear fuel and have expanded to diameters about a hundred times that of the Sun. A number of faint blue stars are also visible in the image. These are in a brief phase of evolution between the dwarf stage and the red-giant stage, during which the surface temperature is high. The stars in Omega Centauri are all very old, about 12 billion years. This Hubble WFPC2 image was taken on June 11, 1997 in ultraviolet, red, and H-alpha filters.

Keywords for this photo:

1997 - ASTRONOMY - CENTAURUS - GLOBULAR CLUSTER - HST - HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - NGC 5139 - OMEGA CENTAURI - SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE - STAR - STAR CLUSTER -