Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Pavo (Pav)  ·  Contains:  HD177272  ·  HD177481  ·  HD177541  ·  HD177694  ·  HD177901  ·  HD177925  ·  HD177999  ·  HD178085  ·  HD178153  ·  HD178611  ·  HD178871  ·  HD178905  ·  IC 4819  ·  NGC 6752
The Great Peacock Globular - NGC 6752, Massimo Di Fusco
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The Great Peacock Globular - NGC 6752

The Great Peacock Globular - NGC 6752, Massimo Di Fusco
Powered byPixInsight

The Great Peacock Globular - NGC 6752

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Description

NGC 6752 (also known as Caldwell 93 and nicknamed the Great Peacock Globular) is a globular cluster in the constellation Pavo. It is the fourth-brightest globular cluster in the sky, after Omega Centauri, 47 Tucanae and Messier 22, respectively.
NGC 6752 was first identified by one James Dunlop of Parramatta on 30 June 1826, who described it as an irregular bright nebula which could be resolved into a cluster of many stars, highly compressed at the centre. This corresponds with a core region densely populated with stars around 1.3 light-years in diameter, which indicates it has undergone core collapse. The cluster lies around 13,000 light-years distant and is one of the closer globular clusters to Earth. It also lies 17,000 light-years away from the galactic centre. It belongs to Shapley–Sawyer Concentration Class VI, namely of intermediate density, and has been calculated to be 11.78 billion years old. There are many binary stars in the system, as well as blue stragglers, which are likely to have been formed by collisions and mergers of smaller stars.

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