Billions of Stars at the Center of the Andromeda Galaxy
Billions of stars at the center of the Andromeda Galaxy. That white dot is not a giant star.
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Billions of stars at the center of the Andromeda Galaxy. That white dot is not a giant star.
Stunning video. Hubble’s high-definition panoramic View of the Andromeda Galaxy. Get an idea of what a few hundred billion stars looks like…
This is the Halo of Andromeda Galaxy (M31), the closest large spiral galaxy to our Milky Way.
Andromeda galaxy, our nearest big neighbor, is roughly the same size as the Milky Way.
On January 5, 2015, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope released the biggest image ever taken of the Andromeda Galaxy… Watch the amazing video and the zoom tool
It’s been 100 years since we discovered the Milky Way isn’t the only galaxy.
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The featured spiral galaxy is labelled UGC 1810 by itself, but together with its collisional partner is known as Arp 273.
How big is our universe? This very question, among others, was debated by two leading astronomers 100 years ago today in what has become known as astronomy’s
NGC 6052, a pair of colliding galaxies, located in the constellation of Hercules, about 230 million light-years away.