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star cluster
(redirected from Star clusters)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.07 sec.
star cluster, a group of stars near each other in space and resembling each other in certain characteristics that suggest a common origin for the group. Stars in the same cluster move at the same rate and in the same direction. Two types of clusters can be distinguished—open clusters, also called galactic clusters because of their wide distribution in our galaxy galaxy, large aggregation of stars , gas, and dust, typically containing billions of stars. Recognition that galaxies are independent star systems outside the Milky Way came from a study of the Andromeda Galaxy (1926–29) by Edwin P.
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 (the Milky Way), and globular clusters. More than one thousand open clusters have been cataloged in the Milky Way, most of which are found in the spiral arms of the galaxy. Typically, an open cluster contains from a few dozen to a thousand loosely scattered stars and exists in a region rich in gas and dust. Among those which can be detected with the unaided eye are the Hyades Hyades (hī`ədēz), in astronomy, open star cluster in the constellation Taurus, located immediately to the right of the bright
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 cluster in the constellation Taurus, the Coma Berenices cluster, the Pleiades Pleiades (plē`ədēz, plī`–), in astronomy, famous open star cluster in the constellation Taurus; cataloged as M45.
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 cluster, and the Praesepe Praesepe (prēsē`pē) [Lat.,=manger], open star cluster in the constellation Cancer; cataloged as M44 or NGC 2632.
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 cluster. Globular clusters are spherical aggregates of from thousands to hundreds of thousands of densely concentrated stars. Rather than lying on the galactic plane, these clusters are members of the outer halo, moving around the nucleus of our galaxy in highly inclined orbits. Because of their distribution around the galaxy, they provide an outline of its shape. About 150 globular clusters are known in the Milky Way galaxy, and others have been found in nearby galaxies. Visible to the unaided eye are Omega Centauri and 47 Tucanae, both in the southern skies, and M13 in the northern sky. Star clusters are cosmologically important as a first step to understanding the distance scale of the universe (see Hyades); and theoretical astronomers use observations of globular clusters to investigate the evolution and life span of stars. Because all the stars in a particular cluster are coeval (the same age), astronomers can infer that massive stars change more rapidly over time than less massive ones. X-ray sources have been detected recently in some globular clusters. Millisecond pulsars pulsar, in astronomy, a neutron star that emits brief, sharp pulses of energy instead of the steady radiation associated with other natural sources. The study of pulsars began when Antony Hewish and his students at Cambridge Univ.
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 have also been found.
star cluster [′stär ‚kləs·tər]
(astronomy)
A group of stars held together by gravitational attraction; the two chief types are open clusters (composed of from 12 to hundreds of stars) and globular clusters (composed of thousands to hundreds of thousands of stars). Also known as cluster.


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They've also found two vast, streams of stars that were most likely torn from star clusters or small galaxies that long ago came too close to our much bigger galaxy.
Astronomers count more than 1,000 star clusters spewing from the crash site -- each cluster containing up to 1 million stars.
Science comes alive in some of the most breathtaking special effects ever attempted in film, allowing the viewer to fly through star clusters and dangerous galactic regions shrouded with dust clouds and menaced by black holes.
 
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