Where to begin when there are so many interesting things in this
Hubble image . . .
I suppose the showpiece is what looks like glitter spread across the image. This is the galaxy ESO 318-13. (Few galaxies have names, most are named by catalog references.) In the center of the galaxy is what looks like a star bright enough to be a supernova. However it's an ordinary star – just not in ESO 318-13, which is millions of light years away. It looks so bright because it's in our own Milky Way galaxy.
In the upper right hand corner of the image is an elliptical galaxy. It's bright, but slightly fuzzy, objec. It's bigger than ESO 318-13, but also farther away.
Galaxies have more space in them than stars, so we can often pick out objects behind a galaxy. If you look closely at the right hand side of ESO 318-18 you should be able to find a distant spiral galaxy.
And you can probably pick out some more very distant galaxies scattered around the image, as well as Milky Way foreground stars.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASAÂ