Menu

M13

Great Hercules Cluster

Aglomerado Globular Espetacular (89/100)
M13 GlobularCluster Hercules Visível Nível 2 Small telescope (4") - Higher magnification helpful
Mapa Estelar Adicionar à Lista Adicionar ao Plano
Voltar ao Catálogo

Propriedades

Magnitude 5.8
Tamanho Angular 16.5′
Distância 22200 ly
Globular Cluster [Distance: 22200 ly]

Posição e Identificadores

RA 16h 41m 41.2s
Dec +36° 27' 35.5"
Constelação Hercules
Catálogo M13

Visibilidade

Defina um local nas Configurações do Usuário para ver dados de visibilidade.

Imagem de Levantamento

Carregando imagem de levantamento…

Sobre M13

Descrição

The Great Hercules Cluster is one of the brightest and best-known globular clusters in the northern sky, located about 22,200 light-years from Earth in the constellation Hercules. It contains roughly 300,000 stars packed into a sphere about 145 light-years in diameter. The cluster is estimated to be 11.65 billion years old, making it one of the oldest objects in the Milky Way. Its stars are metal-poor, typical of Population II stars formed in the early universe.

Dicas de Observação

Located along the western edge of the Keystone asterism in Hercules, about one-third of the way from Eta to Zeta Herculis. Visible to the naked eye from very dark sites as a faint fuzzy star. Binoculars show a distinct round glow. A 4-inch telescope at 100x begins to resolve individual stars at the edges, while the core remains an intense, grainy glow. An 8-inch or larger telescope at 150-200x spectacularly resolves stars across the entire cluster, with chains and streams of stars radiating outward. Best observed from May through September.

História

Discovered by Edmond Halley in 1714, who noted it could be seen with the naked eye on clear nights. Charles Messier cataloged it in 1764. William Herschel was the first to resolve it into individual stars in 1783. In 1974, the Arecibo radio telescope beamed a message toward M13 — the famous Arecibo Message — as a demonstration of human technological achievement.

Curiosidades

The Arecibo Message sent toward M13 in 1974 contained information about humanity, DNA, and our solar system — but since M13 is 22,200 light-years away, any reply wouldn't arrive for at least 44,400 years. Due to the cluster's motion, the message will actually miss M13 entirely by the time it arrives. The cluster contains a young blue star population that shouldn't exist in such an old cluster, likely formed from stellar mergers.

Fotos da Comunidade (1)

Credit: Chuck Ayoub. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: Chuck Ayoub. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026