Loading...

This page describes an image The Wild Duck Open Cluster

Scarica File ( immagine 472.01 kB)

Didascalia: This image shows the Wild Duck Cluster (also known as Messier 11 or M11), a bright grouping of stars that forms what astronomers call an open cluster in our Milky Way galaxy. Open clusters are collections of stars that were born from the same giant cloud of gas and dust and are still loosely held together by gravity. Most open clusters will slowly fall apart over hundreds of millions of years are they orbit through the galaxy. In this view, hundreds of stars appear close together against the dark background of space, with many shining at different brightnesses depending on their size and temperature.

The Wild Duck Cluster lies about 6,000 light-years from Earth and is around 300 million years old. Because the stars in an open cluster share a common origin, astronomers can use them as laboratories for testing theories on stellar evolution and behaviour.
Didascalie in altre lingue


Crediti per l'immagine: NASA/JPL Link per i Crediti

Termini di glossario connessi: Ammasso aperto , Oggetto Messier

Licenza per l'immagine: Dominio Pubblico Dominio Pubblico icone

Le didascalie di file multimediali presentate sul sito web OAE sono state scritte,Tradotte e riviste tramit Sun impegno collettivo dell'OAE, dei Centri e Nodi OAE, iCoordinatori Nazionali per la Didattica dell'Astronomia e altri volontari. Trovatel'elenco completo dei crediti per il nostro progetto di traduzione. Tutte le didascaliedei file multimediali sono pubblicate sotto Creative Commons CC BY-4.0 licenza di traduzione, e dovrebbero essereaccreditate all'IAU OAE.I file multimediali stessi possono avere licenze diverse (vedi sopra) eDovrebbero essere accreditate come specificato al paragrafo "crediti"

Se noti un errore di fatto in questa didascalia o un errore in una delle sue traduzioni, per favore contattaci.

Didascalie in lingue diverse:

Inglese
Didascalia: This image shows the Wild Duck Cluster (also known as Messier 11 or M11), a bright grouping of stars that forms what astronomers call an open cluster in our Milky Way galaxy. Open clusters are collections of stars that were born from the same giant cloud of gas and dust and are still loosely held together by gravity. Most open clusters will slowly fall apart over hundreds of millions of years are they orbit through the galaxy. In this view, hundreds of stars appear close together against the dark background of space, with many shining at different brightnesses depending on their size and temperature.

The Wild Duck Cluster lies about 6,000 light-years from Earth and is around 300 million years old. Because the stars in an open cluster share a common origin, astronomers can use them as laboratories for testing theories on stellar evolution and behaviour.
Crediti per l'immagine: NASA/JPL
Termini di glossario connessi: Messier Object , Open Cluster