Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Serpens (Ser)  ·  Contains:  M 5  ·  NGC 5904  ·  The star 5 Ser
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M 5 - NGC 5904 | Globular Cluster from the Balcony, Peter Graf
M 5 - NGC 5904 | Globular Cluster from the Balcony
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M 5 - NGC 5904 | Globular Cluster from the Balcony

Acquisition type: Electronically-Assisted Astronomy (EAA, e.g. based on a live video feed)
Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
M 5 - NGC 5904 | Globular Cluster from the Balcony, Peter Graf
M 5 - NGC 5904 | Globular Cluster from the Balcony
Powered byPixInsight

M 5 - NGC 5904 | Globular Cluster from the Balcony

Acquisition type: Electronically-Assisted Astronomy (EAA, e.g. based on a live video feed)

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Description

Again a session from the balcony in the city, this time with Nina. Glad that everything worked as expected, whereas the city is already heating up... 

From Wikipedia
Messier 5 or M5 (also designated NGC 5904) is a globular cluster in the constellation Serpens. It was discovered by Gottfried Kirch in 1702.
M5 is, under extremely good conditions, just visible to the naked eye as a faint "star" 0.37 of a degree (22' (arcmin)) north-west of star 5 Serpentis. Binoculars and/or small telescopes resolve the object as non-stellar; larger telescopes will show some individual stars, some of which are as bright as apparent magnitude 10.6. M5 was discovered by German astronomer Gottfried Kirch in 1702 when he was observing a comet. Charles Messier noted it in 1764 and—a studier of comets—cast it as one of his nebulae. William Herschel was the first to resolve individual stars in the cluster in 1791, counting roughly 200. Messier 5 is receding from the Solar System at a speed over 50 km/s.

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M 5 - NGC 5904 | Globular Cluster from the Balcony, Peter Graf