Chandra Release - July 30, 2003 Visual Description: NGC 6266 The two-panel Chandra X-ray Observatory image of the globular star clusters NGC 6266 (left side) and NGC 7099 (right side) displays a dark background with numerous bright dots scattered across the images, resembling multicolored holiday lights. These dots range in size and intensity, with some being brighter and more prominent than others. Some of the bright dots appear to have blurred edges and several concentrated clusters of bright dots are visible. A globular cluster is a spherical collection of hundreds of thousands and even millions of stars buzzing around each other in a gravitationally bound stellar beehive that is about a hundred light years in diameter. Some stars in a globular cluster are only about a tenth of a light year apart. For comparison, the nearest star to the Sun, Proxima Centauri, is 4.2 light years away. Most of the point-like sources in these images are binary star systems containing a collapsed star, such as a neutron star or a white dwarf star, that is pulling matter off a normal companion star. While direct, head-on collisions between stars are rare even in these crowded circumstances, close encounters occur and can lead to the formation of binary star systems containing a collapsed star.