Hubble Focuses on Coma Cluster of Galaxies
June 10, 2008
The Coma Cluster of galaxies is one of the densest collections of galaxies in the universe. The Hubble Space Telescope’s Advanced Camera for Surveys viewed a large portion of the cluster, spanning several million light-years across. This cluster contains thousands of galaxies and lies near the Milky Way’s north pole, about 300 million light-years away from Earth. The movie begins with a ground-based image from Akira Fujii, transitions to imaging from the Digitized Sky Survey, and ends with a closer look provided in Hubble’s mosaic of the Coma Cluster. Credit: NASA/ESA
Topics:
Environment, Coma Berenices constellation, Hubble Space Telescope, Astronomy, Technology Internet, NGC, Hubble Deep Field, Coma Cluster, Milky Way, Galaxy, Galaxy groups and clusters, Spiral galaxies, Galaxy clusters, Large-scale structure of the cosmos
