Large cluster of stars globbing together. The image itself has an orange hue to the point that every star is either orange, white orange, or deep red. Brighter in the center of the image.

Star Clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud

This Hubble Space Telescope image shows rich detail in a pair of star clusters 166,000 light-years away in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), in the southern constellation Doradus. The field of view is 130 light-years across and was taken with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2. About 60 percent of the stars belong to the dominant yellow cluster called NGC 1850, which is estimated to be 50 million years old. A scattering of white stars in the image are massive stars that are only about 4 million years old and represent about 20 percent of the stars in the image. (The remainder are field stars in the LMC.) Besides being much younger, the white stars are much more loosely distributed than the yellow cluster. The significant difference between the two cluster ages suggests these are two separate star groups that lie along the same line of sight. The younger, more open cluster probably lies 200 light-years beyond the older cluster. If it were in the foreground, then dust contained in the white cluster would obscure stars in the older, yellow cluster. The stair-shape of the image is caused by the design of the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 instrument, which captured it. For more information, visit: hubblesite.org/contents/news-releases/1994/news-1994-40.html

Credits: R. Gilmozzi, Space Telescope Science Institute/European Space Agency; Shawn Ewald, JPL; and NASA