Hubble
Sees a Vast "City" of Stars
In these pictures, a "city" of a million stars glitters
like a New York City skyline. The images capture the globular cluster
47 Tucanae, located 15,000 light-years from Earth in the southern
constellation Tucana.
Using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers went
hunting in this large city for planetary companions: bloated gaseous
planets that snuggle close to their parent stars, completing an
orbit in a quick three to five days. To their surprise, they found
none. This finding suggests that the cluster's environment is too
hostile for breeding planets or that it lacks the necessary elements
for making them.
The picture at left, taken by a terrestrial telescope,
shows most of the cluster, a tightly packed group of middle-aged
stars held together by mutual gravitational attraction. The box
near the center represents the Hubble telescope's view.
The image at right shows the Hubble telescope's close-up
look at a swarm of 35,000 stars near the cluster's central region.
The stars are tightly packed together: They're much closer together
than our Sun and its closest stars. The picture, taken by the Wide
Field and Planetary Camera 2, depicts the stars' natural colors
and tells scientists about their composition and age. For example,
the red stars denote bright red giants nearing the end of their
lives; the more common yellow stars are similar to our middle-aged
Sun. Most of the stars in the cluster are believed to have formed
about 10 billion years ago. The bright, blue stars -- thought to
be remnants of stellar collisions and mergers -- provide a few rejuvenated,
energetic stars in an otherwise old system. The Hubble picture was
taken in July 1999.
Credits for Hubble image:
NASA and Ron Gilliland (Space
Telescope Science Institute)
Credits for ground-based image:
David Malin, © Anglo-Australian Observatory
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