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AAO image reference AAT 89. « Previous || Next » ![]() Top left is NE. Image width is about 18 arc min Image and text © 1992-2002, Anglo-Australian Observatory, photograph by David Malin. To the unaided eye this glorious globular cluster has the appearance of a hazy star and was frequently confused with Halley's comet when it drifted through Centaurus in 1986. One of the richest in the Milky Way, Omega Cen contains several million stars, but unlike its southern rival, 47 Tucanae, it has a relatively open structure. Like most galactic globular clusters, the stellar population of Omega Cen identifies it as one of the oldest objects associated with the Milky Way, indeed its age is comparable to that of the Universe itself. The cluster contains a large number of RR Lyrae variable stars which enable its distance to be determined as 17,000 light years. Entry from NGC 2000.0 (R.W. Sinnott, Ed.) © Sky Publishing Corporation, 1988: NGC 5139 Gb 13 26.8 -47 29 s Cen 36.33.7 !!!, glob. cl. , omega CenRelated Images AAT 89a. The globular cluster Omega Centauri, NGC 5139 (wide angle, landscape format) AAT 89b. The globular cluster Omega Centauri, NGC 5139 (wide angle, portrait format) For details of photographic exposure, search technical table by AAT reference number. |
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