The visible universe. I'm a bit of a space buff and to my knowledge there aren't any celestial
structures that are larger than a galaxy cluster. The only one I've come upon is the visible universe itself. I could be wrong about that but then again, I could be right. That tends to be how celestial questions like that one go. Hope this helps.
Answer 2:
Galaxy clusters are clusters of galaxies and therefore larger than individual galaxies. Superclusters are clusters of galaxy clusters and so are larger then galaxy clusters. Filaments are collections of superclusters and are the largest known structures in the universe.
A globular cluster is always associated with a galaxy. It is much smaller, containing about 100,000 stars whereas a galaxy can contain billions of stars.
A galaxy cluster is far bigger. A globular cluster is a group of mutually orbiting, gravitationally bound stars that orbit the center of a galaxy together. A mini-galaxy within a galaxy.
Galaxy.
Yes
A galaxy cluster consists of several galaxy groups, each of which in turn contains several galaxies. So no; a galaxy cluster is MUCH bigger than any individual galaxy.
Yes, it's a cluster of galaxies, not just one.
Yes. From Wikipedia: "...as of 2010, is the largest known structure in the Universe. ... The wall measures 1.37 billion light years (1.30×1025 m) in length..." This is much more than a galaxy cluster.
Andromeda Galaxy - M31 Our Galaxy cluster is called "The local group".
Our Universe is bigger, than a galaxy.
No, a globular cluster is a group of stars that are part of a galaxy. The Virgo cluster is much bigger. It is a large nearby group of galaxies.
No, it is a galaxy. A stellar cluster is an object that is much smaller than a galaxy, and contains a few thousand stars, up to about a million or so. A galaxy cluster, on the other hand, is a group of galaxies, not a single galaxy.
That is called a globular cluster.
A galaxy is bigger than a black hole.
A Galaxy is far bigger than a nebula.
Yes, a clump cluster galaxy is a type of peculiar galaxy.
No!