25 Dec 2025
🔭 Scope & details:
Lights: 12x300" R, 12x300" G, 12x300" B, 10x300" + 10x5" Luminance
Telescope: Planewave CDK24
Camera: FLI ProLine PL9000
Filters: Astrodon
Date: 08/10/2020
Dominating the southern sky, 47 Tucanae is one of the largest and brightest globular clusters associated with the Milky Way.
Located roughly 13,000 light-years away, this stellar metropolis contains millions of ancient stars, tightly bound by gravity and packed into a dazzling, spherical core.
The intense central brightness reveals an extraordinary stellar density, where stars orbit in close proximity, some among the oldest known in our galaxy—cosmic fossils formed more than 12 billion years ago.
As the cluster fades outward, individual suns emerge against the dark background, showcasing the delicate balance between order and chaos that defines globular clusters.
This image captures the sheer scale and depth of 47 Tuc, a reminder that long before the Sun was born, these stars were already shining.
✨ Constellation: Tucana
📏 Distance: ~13,000 light-years
💫 Apparent Magnitude: ~4.1
🌌 Type: Globular Cluster
📸 Alessandro Motta | @ale_motta_astrofotografia
#47Tucanae #GlobularCluster #DeepSky #Astrophotography #SouthernSky #MilkyWay #AncientStars #CosmicHistory #StarCluster #SpaceArt #AstronomyLovers
47 Tucanae
5 credit