What is the typical stellar population size of a globular cluster?
Answer
Hundreds of thousands to millions of stars.
Globular clusters are tightly bound collections containing anywhere from hundreds of thousands up to millions of stars concentrated into a relatively small volume of space.

Related Questions
What is the typical stellar population size of a globular cluster?How ancient are globular clusters generally considered to be?How do globular clusters contrast visually and structurally with open clusters?What frequent dynamic event characterizes the extremely dense core of a globular cluster?What specific type of star can evolve as a result of the high-density environment in a cluster core?In a large spiral galaxy like the Milky Way, where are globular clusters predominantly situated?Compared to open clusters, what is characteristic of the orbital paths of globular clusters around a galaxy's center?What is the approximate typical diameter spanned by a globular cluster containing up to ten million stars?What real-world factor often prevents a globular cluster from being a *perfectly* spherical shape?What visual feature defines the descriptive power of 'globular' when viewing the cluster's light profile?