Astronomy

(Marcin) #1
50 ASTRONOMY • SEPTEMBER 2017

hen most
Northern
Hemisphere
observers
think of globu-
lar clusters, they
imagine a concentration low
in the southern summer sky.
The dense nebulae and stellar
clouds in that area are bright
enough to cast a subtle shadow
as they point to the core of our
Milky Way.
Earth’s placement halfway
from our galaxy’s center gov-
erns our perspective much as a
suburban view toward a city
contrasts sharply with farms
and fields in the opposite direc-
tion. Ref lecting this skewed
dispersal is the placement of
globular clusters, enormous
stellar spheres f loating against
a seemingly infinite firmament.
They contain, on average,

several hundred thousand
closely packed stars, and their
density is a few hundred to a
few thousand times greater
than that in our Sun’s
neighborhood.
Sagittarius joins its promi-
nent neighboring constellations
Scorpius and Ophiuchus in
hosting roughly half of these
great stellar metropolises.
Analyses over the years have
shown that the globular clus-
ters form a large halo extend-
ing past the main body of
our galaxy. While the disk
of the Milky Way is
dense, dynamic, and
rife with star forma-
tion, the halo is rela-
tively calm. The
globulars are placid,
stable, and nearly as
old as the universe
itself.

Among Milky Way objects
they are distant, and despite
their great numbers of stars,
they are not conspicuous
naked-eye objects. Only two
are plainly visible without opti-
cal aid (both in the southern
sky), and a handful of others
hover at the threshold of vis-
ibility. Views of other galaxies
clearly

Target this list of two dozen beautiful star cities, none of which you’ ll find in the old standbys
Scorpius, Ophiuchus, or Sagittarius! by F. Michael Witkoski

off-season glo


The secrets of


show their halos of globular
clusters, something we cannot
observe from within the con-
fines our own system.
Our nearby galactic neighbor,
the Andromeda Galaxy (M31),
houses about 500 globulars, a
pittance compared with the
thousands for giant elliptical
galaxies such as Virgo’s M87,
which contains some 13,000.
Our Milky Way is home
to only about 150,

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M30


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