 An international team of astronomers recently used the Hubble Space Telescope to study white dwarf stars within the globular cluster NGC 6752. In the outer fringes of the observed area, they accidentally discovered a compact collection of stars that were much further away than any of the stars in the cluster. In fact, they were so far away that they could not be in the Milky Way at all. Astronomers determined that they had found a new galaxy, a dwarf spheroidal galaxy 30 million light years away. They named it Bedin 1.