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Mercury
Spring 2009 Table of Contents


Image courtesy of Robert Gendler.
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by
Duncan A. Forbes, Pavel Kroupa, Manuel Metz, and Lee Spitler
Our
Milky Way galaxy is host to a number of companions. These companions
are gravitationally bound to the Milky Way and are stellar systems
in their own right. They include a population of about 150 globular
clusters (GCs) and some 30 dwarf satellite galaxies (DSGs).
Globular
clusters -- dense, spherical collections from about 10,000 to as
many as one million stars -- are well known to amateur astronomers.
Satellite galaxies include the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds,
visible to the naked eye in the Southern Hemisphere, and a host
of smaller, fainter galaxies. These DSGs are more extended and diffuse
compared to GCs. In fact the larger satellites of the Milky Way
(and other galaxies, for that matter) host their own small systems
of GCs.
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