Galaxy clusters are big groups of galaxies that hang out together in space, like friends at a party.
Imagine you have a bunch of toy cars, and they all drive around on the same playground, sometimes they zoom past each other, sometimes they stop to talk. That's kind of what happens with galaxy clusters: galaxies are like those toy cars, and they're all moving together in space because of gravity.
Like a Super Group of Friends
A galaxy cluster can have hundreds or even thousands of galaxies, that’s way more than your classroom! Just like you might have different groups at the playground (some playing tag, some drawing pictures), galaxy clusters are made up of different kinds of galaxies, all in one place.
The Gravity Pull
What keeps them together? Gravity, it's like a really strong magnet that pulls everything toward each other. You feel gravity when you jump and come back down; galaxies feel it too, which is why they stay close and move together in space.
So galaxy clusters are just groups of galaxies hanging out together, held together by the force of gravity, no magic needed!
Examples
- Galaxy clusters are huge collections of galaxies that stick together.
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See also
- How Does Galaxies, part 1: Crash Course Astronomy #38 Work?
- What Are Barred Spiral Galaxies?
- How Does Galaxies: Explained | Astronomic Work?
- Are astronomers ignoring some of the cosmos?
- Differences Between Spiral And Elliptical Galaxies?