Cosmos blanket
seen from Colombia

seen from Russia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
seen from Bulgaria
seen from China
seen from Pakistan
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Taiwan
seen from Philippines
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
Cosmos blanket
Distance does not prevent alignment.
The globular cluster NGC 6528 (lower left) is close to NGC 6522 (upper right)
The Hercules Globular Cluster, M13 // Steven Christensen
Globular Cluster
NGC 6355 is a globular cluster located in the constellation Ophiuchus. It is one of the many globular clusters that orbit the Milky Way galaxy.
Globular clusters are dense collections of stars, typically containing hundreds of thousands to millions of stars, all bound together by gravity.
It is less than 50,000 light-years from Earth.
Credits: ESA/Hubble & NASA, E. Noyola, R. Cohen
At The Core Of M15 - January 17th, 1998.
"Densely packed stars in the core of the globular cluster M15 are shown in this Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image. The star colours roughly indicate their temperatures - hot stars appear blue, cooler stars look reddish-orange. The region visible here is only about 1.6 light-years across, compared to the 4.3 light-year distance to our own Sun's nearest neighbor. Imagine the night sky viewed from a planet orbiting a star near this cluster's center! M15 has long been recognised as one of the densest clusters of stars in our galaxy outside of the galactic center itself. Even the unprecedented resolving power of the HST cameras could not separate the individual stars in its innermost regions. However, this HST image reveals that the density of stars continues to rise toward the cluster's core, suggesting that a sudden, runaway collapse due to the gravitational attraction of many closely packed stars or a single central massive object, perhaps a black hole, could account for the core's extreme density."
Messier 13. The Great Globular Cluster in Hercules located 25 million light-years away. 4 hours of integration with calibration frames. Gear shit out overnight otherwise it would have been closer to 8 hours lol.
Millions of Stars in Omega Centauri ©
The Beehive Cluster M44