The Great Globular Star Cluster in Hercules
Messier 13 ( M13, NGC 6205) is a globular cluster of approximately 300,000 stars in the Hercules Constellation. It is also recalled as the Great Globular Cluster in Hercules or the Hercules Globular Cluster.
Having a magnitude of 5.8 and a diameter of about 23 arc minutes, Messier 13 can be easily seen with small telescopes and even with the naked eye when the sky is very clear. The brightest star of the globular cluster is the variable star V11, that has an apparent magnitude of 11.95. Close to Messier 13 is NGC 6207, a twice as big edge-on galaxy. Midway between them lies IC 4617, a small galaxy situated north-northeast of the globular cluster’s center.
In 1974 Messier 13 was the subject of a research. Scientists believed that due to a very high number of stars, the Hercules Globular Cluster could have an environment that sustains intelligent life forms. The Arecibo message was sent towards the globular cluster in order to establish communication with these hypothetical life forms. This experiment was meant to demonstrate more the evolution of technology than to establish communication with other life forms, because at the time of the message’s arrival M13 would have changed it’s location. Could there be life on Messier 13? Still remains an open question.
Distance from Earth: ~ 25000 light years.
Click below for full resolution picture of M13′s Nucleus
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