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With a population of about 129 million in 2022, [6] Mexico is the 10th most populated country in the world.It is the largest Spanish-speaking country in the world and the third-most populous country in the Americas after the United States and Brazil, [7] the most populous city in the country is the capital, Mexico City, with a population of 9.2 million and its metropolitan area is also the ...
An astronomical catalogue is a list or tabulation of astronomical objects, typically grouped together because they share a common type, morphology, origin, means of detection, or method of discovery. Astronomical catalogs are usually the result of an astronomical survey of some kind.
The following are lists of clusters: List of galaxy groups and clusters; List of open clusters; List of globular clusters; See also. List of superclusters
Pan-American countries by population, 2020. This is a list of countries and ... Pan-American countries by population, 2020 ... Official population clock: 3 Mexico:
Messier 30 (also known as M30, NGC 7099, or the Jellyfish Cluster) is a globular cluster of stars in the southeast of the southern constellation of Capricornus, at about the declination of the Sun when the latter is at December solstice.
Tonantzintla, Mexico Observatorio Solar Carl Sagan: 2000 Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico Observatory House (defunct) 1789 Slough, UK Observatory of the rue Serpente (defunct) 1890–1968 Paris, France Oil Region Astronomical Observatory: Venango County, Pennsylvania, US Onan Observatory: 1990 Norwood Young America, Minnesota, US
Globular cluster: Nearest globular cluster to the Earth. Also the first globular cluster known to have exoplanets (PSR B1620-26b) Messier 12: 74.4 [28] Messier 70: 68 [29] NGC 290: 66 [30] Open cluster: Messier 28: 60 [31] Globular cluster: Messier 18: 52.4 [32] Open cluster: The following notable star clusters are listed for the purpose of ...
The Milky Way. Population II stars are in the galactic bulge and globular clusters. Artist’s impression of a field of population III stars 100 million years after the Big Bang. Population II, or metal-poor, stars are those with relatively little of the elements heavier than helium. These objects were formed during an earlier time of the universe.