Astronomy Picture of the Day |
APOD: 2024 November 28 - NGC 206 and the Star Clouds of Andromeda
Explanation:
The large stellar association cataloged as
NGC 206 is
nestled within the dusty arms of the neighboring
Andromeda galaxy
along with the galaxy's pinkish star-forming regions.
Also known as M31,
the spiral galaxy is a mere
2.5 million light-years away.
NGC 206 is found at the center of
this sharp and detailed close-up
of the southwestern extent of
Andromeda's disk.
The bright, blue
stars of NGC 206
indicate its youth.
In fact, its youngest massive stars are less than 10 million years old.
Much larger than the open or galactic clusters of young stars
in the disk of our Milky Way galaxy,
NGC 206
spans about 4,000 light-years.
That's comparable in size to the giant stellar nurseries
NGC 604 in nearby spiral
M33 and the
Tarantula Nebula
in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
APOD: 2024 October 2 – The Large Magellanic Cloud Galaxy
Explanation:
It is the largest satellite galaxy of our home Milky Way Galaxy.
If you live in the south, the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is
quite noticeable, spanning about 10 degrees across the night sky,
which is 20 times larger than the
full moon towards the southern constellation of the
dolphinfish
(Dorado).
Being only about 160,000
light years away,
many details of the LMC's structure can be seen, such as its
central bar and its single spiral arm.
The LMC harbors numerous stellar nurseries
where new stars are being born, which appear in pink in the
featured image.
It is home to the
Tarantula Nebula,
the currently most active star forming region in the entire
Local Group, a small collection of nearby galaxies dominated by the massive
Andromeda and
Milky Way
galaxies.
Studies of the LMC and the
Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) by
Henrietta Swan Leavitt
led to the discovery of the period-luminosity relationship of
Cepheid variable stars that are used to
measure distances across the nearby
universe.
APOD: 2024 September 8 – M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is
M31,
the great Andromeda Galaxy.
Even at some two and a half million
light-years distant,
this immense spiral galaxy -- spanning over
200,000 light years -- is visible, although as a faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
A bright yellow nucleus, dark winding
dust lanes, and
expansive spiral arms dotted with
blue star clusters and
red nebulae,
are recorded in
this stunning telescopic image
which combines data from
orbiting Hubble with ground-based images from
Subaru and
Mayall.
In only about 5 billion years, the Andromeda galaxy may be even
easier to see -- as it will likely span the
entire night sky -- just before it
merges with, or
passes right by, our
Milky Way Galaxy.
APOD: 2024 April 26 - Regulus and the Dwarf Galaxy
Explanation:
In northern hemisphere spring,
bright star Regulus is easy to spot above the eastern horizon.
The alpha star of the constellation Leo, Regulus is the spiky star
centered in this
telescopic field of view.
A mere 79 light-years distant,
Regulus
is a
hot, rapidly spinning star
that is known to be part of a multiple star system.
Not quite lost in the glare, the fuzzy patch just below Regulus
is diffuse starlight from small galaxy Leo I.
Leo I is a
dwarf spheroidal galaxy,
a member of the
Local Group
of galaxies dominated by our
Milky Way Galaxy
and the Andromeda Galaxy
(M31).
About 800 thousand light-years away, Leo I
is thought to be the most distant of the
known small satellite galaxies orbiting the Milky Way.
But dwarf galaxy Leo I has shown
evidence
of a supermassive black hole
at its center, comparable in mass to the black hole at the center
of the Milky Way.
APOD: 2024 March 9 - Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks in Northern Spring
Explanation:
As spring approaches for northern skygazers,
Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks
is growing brighter.
Currently visible
with small telescopes and binoculars,
the Halley-type comet could reach naked eye visibility in the
coming weeks.
Seen despite a foggy atmosphere,
the comet's green coma and long tail hover near the horizon
in this well-composed
deep night skyscape
from Revuca, Slovakia recorded on March 5.
M31, also known as the Andromeda galaxy,
and bright yellowish star Mirach,
beta star of the constellation Andromeda,
hang in the sky above the comet.
The Andromeda galaxy is some
2.5 million light-years beyond the Milky Way.
Comet Pons-Brooks is a periodic
visitor to the inner Solar System
and less than 14 light-minutes away.
Reaching its perihelion on April 21, this comet should be visible
in the sky
during the April 8 total solar eclipse.
APOD: 2024 January 18 - Northern Lights from the Stratosphere
Explanation:
Northern lights shine in
this night skyview from
planet Earth's stratosphere,
captured on January 15.
The single, 5 second exposure was made with a
hand-held camera on board an
aircraft above Winnipeg, Canada.
During the exposure, terrestrial lights below leave colorful trails along
the direction of motion of the speeding aircraft.
Above the more distant horizon,
energetic particles accelerated
along Earth's magnetic field at the
planet's polar regions
excite atomic oxygen to create the shimmering
display of Aurora Borealis.
The aurora's characteristic greenish hue is generated at altitudes
of 100-300 kilometers and red at even higher altitudes and
lower atmospheric densities.
The luminous glow of faint stars along the plane of our Milky Way galaxy
arcs through the night,
while the Andromeda galaxy extends this northern skyview to
extragalactic space.
A diffuse hint of Andromeda,
the closest large spiral to the Milky Way, can just be seen
to the upper left.
APOD: 2023 December 27 – Rainbow Aurora over Icelandic Waterfall
Explanation:
Yes, but can your aurora do this?
First, yes,
auroras can look like
rainbows even though they are completely different phenomena.
Auroras are caused by Sun-created particles being channeled into
Earth's atmosphere by
Earth's magnetic field, and
create colors by exciting
atoms at different heights.
Conversely, rainbows are created by sunlight backscattering off falling raindrops,
and different colors are
refracted by slightly different angles.
Unfortunately, auroras can’t create waterfalls,
but if you plan well and are lucky enough, you can photograph them together.
The featured picture is composed of several images
taken on the same night last November near the
Skógafoss waterfall in
Iceland.
The planning centered on capturing the
central band of our
Milky Way galaxy over the
picturesque
cascade.
By luck, a
spectacular aurora soon appeared just below the curving arch of the Milky Way.
Far in the background, the
Pleiades star cluster and the
Andromeda galaxy can be found.
APOD: 2023 December 12 – Aurora and Milky Way over Norway
Explanation:
What are these two giant arches across the sky?
Perhaps the more familiar one, on the left, is the central band of our
Milky Way Galaxy.
This grand disk of stars and nebulas here appears to encircle much of the southern sky.
Visible below the stellar arch is the
rusty-orange planet
Mars and the extended
Andromeda galaxy.
But this night had more!
For a few minutes during this
cold
arctic night, a second
giant arch appeared
encircling part of the northern sky: an
aurora.
Auroras are much closer than stars as they are composed of glowing air high in
Earth's atmosphere.
Visible outside the
green auroral arch is the group of stars popularly
known as the
Big Dipper.
The featured digital composite of 20 images was captured in
mid-November 2022 over the
Lofoten Islands in
Norway.
APOD: 2023 November 13 – Andromeda over the Alps
Explanation:
Have you ever seen the Andromeda galaxy?
Although
M31
appears as a faint and fuzzy blob to the unaided eye,
the light you see will be over two million years old,
making it likely the oldest light you ever will
see directly.
The featured image captured
Andromeda just before it set behind the
Swiss
Alps early last year.
As cool as it may be to see this
neighboring galaxy to our Milky Way
with your own eyes, long duration camera exposures can pick up many
faint and
breathtaking details.
The image
is composite of foreground and background images taken
consecutively with the same camera and from the same location.
Recent data indicate that our
Milky Way Galaxy
will collide and coalesce
with Andromeda galaxy in a few billion years.
APOD: 2023 November 2 - The Fornax Cluster of Galaxies
Explanation:
Named for the southern
constellation
toward which most of its galaxies can be found, the
Fornax
Cluster is one of the closest clusters of galaxies.
About 62 million light-years away, it's over 20 times more
distant than our neighboring
Andromeda Galaxy, but
only about 10 percent farther along than the better known and more
populated Virgo Galaxy Cluster.
Seen across
this three degree wide
field-of-view, almost every
yellowish splotch on the image is an elliptical galaxy in the
Fornax cluster.
Elliptical galaxies
NGC 1399 and NGC
1404
are the dominant, bright cluster members toward the bottom center.
A standout, large barred spiral galaxy,
NGC 1365,
is visible on the upper right as a prominent Fornax cluster member.
APOD: 2023 October 7 - The Once and Future Stars of Andromeda
Explanation:
This picture of Andromeda shows not only where stars are now,
but where stars will be.
The big, beautiful
Andromeda Galaxy,
M31, is a
spiral galaxy
a mere 2.5 million
light-years
away.
Image data from space-based and ground-based observatories have been
combined here to produce
this intriguing composite
view of Andromeda at wavelengths both
inside and outside normally visible light.
The visible light
shows where M31's stars are now, highlighted in
white and blue hues and imaged by the
Hubble,
Subaru, and
Mayall telescopes.
The infrared light
shows where M31's future stars will soon form,
highlighted in orange hues and imaged by NASA's
Spitzer Space Telescope.
The infrared light tracks enormous
lanes of dust,
warmed by stars, sweeping along Andromeda's spiral arms.
This dust is a tracer of the galaxy's vast
interstellar gas, raw material for future
star formation.
Of course, the new stars will likely form over the next hundred million years or so.
That's well before Andromeda merges with our
Milky Way Galaxy in about 5 billion years.
APOD: 2023 October 6 - Edwin Hubble Discovers the Universe
Explanation:
How big is our universe?
This question,
among others,
was debated by two leading astronomers in 1920 in what has since
become known as
astronomy's
Great Debate.
Many astronomers then believed that our
Milky Way Galaxy was the entire universe.
Many others, though, believed that our galaxy was just
one of many.
In the
Great Debate,
each argument was detailed, but no consensus was reached.
The answer came over three years later with the detected variation
of single spot in the
Andromeda Nebula, as shown on the
original glass discovery plate digitally reproduced here.
When Edwin
Hubble compared images, he noticed that this
spot varied, and on October 6, 1923
wrote "VAR!" on the plate.
The best explanation, Hubble knew, was that this spot was the
image of a variable star that was very far away.
So M31 was really the
Andromeda Galaxy --
a galaxy possibly similar to our own.
Annotated 100 years ago, the
featured image
may not be pretty, but the variable spot on it opened a window
through which humanity gazed knowingly, for the first time, into a
surprisingly vast cosmos.
APOD: 2023 August 23 – The Meteor and the Galaxy
Explanation:
It came from
outer space.
It -- in this case a
sand-sized bit of a
comet nucleus -- was likely ejected many years ago from Sun-orbiting
Comet Swift-Tuttle, but then continued to orbit the Sun alone.
When the Earth crossed through this orbit, the piece of comet debris impacted the
atmosphere of our fair planet
and was seen as a meteor.
This meteor deteriorated, causing gases to be emitted that glowed in colors emitted by its component elements.
The featured image was taken last week from
Castilla La Mancha,
Spain,
during the peak night of the
Perseids meteor shower.
The picturesque meteor streak happened to appear in the
only one of 50 frames that also included the
Andromeda galaxy.
Stars dot the frame, each much further away than the meteor.
Compared to the stars, the
Andromeda galaxy (M31) is, again, much further away.
APOD: 2023 August 16 - Arp 93: A Cosmic Embrace
Explanation:
Locked in a cosmic embrace,
two large galaxies are merging
at the center of this sharp telescopic field of view.
The interacting system cataloged
as Arp 93 is some 200 million
light-years distant toward the constellation Aquarius in planet Earth's
sky.
Individually the galaxies are identified as NGC 7285 (right) and NGC 7284.
Their bright cores are still separated by about
20,000 light-years or so, but a massive
tidal stream,
a result of their ongoing
gravitational interaction,
extends over 200,000 light-years
toward the bottom of the frame.
Interacting galaxies do look
peculiar,
but are now understood to be common in the Universe.
In fact, closer to home, the large spiral Andromeda Galaxy is known to be
approaching the Milky Way.
Arp 93 may well present an analog of their distant
future cosmic embrace.
APOD: 2023 May 31 – Simulation: A Disk Galaxy Forms
Explanation:
How did we get here?
We know that we live on a
planet orbiting a
star orbiting a
galaxy, but how did all of this form?
Since our universe
moves too slowly to watch,
faster-moving computer simulations are
created to help
find out.
Specifically,
this featured video from the
IllustrisTNG collaboration
tracks gas from the early universe
(redshift 12) until today
(redshift 0).
As the simulation begins, ambient gas falls into and accumulates in a
region of relatively high
gravity.
After a few billion years, a well-defined center materializes from a
strange and fascinating
cosmic dance.
Gas blobs -- some representing
small satellite galaxies -- continue to fall into and become absorbed by the
rotating galaxy as the present epoch is reached and the video ends.
For the
Milky Way Galaxy,
however, big mergers may not be over --
recent evidence indicates that our large spiral disk Galaxy
will collide and coalesce with the slightly larger
Andromeda spiral disk galaxy in the next few billion years.
APOD: 2023 April 12 - NGC 206 and the Star Clouds of Andromeda
Explanation:
The large stellar association cataloged as
NGC 206 is
nestled within the dusty arms of the neighboring
Andromeda galaxy
along with the galaxy's pinkish star-forming regions.
Also known as M31,
the spiral galaxy is a mere
2.5 million light-years away.
NGC 206 is found right of center in
this sharp and detailed close-up of the southwestern
extent of
Andromeda's disk.
The bright, blue
stars of NGC 206
indicate its youth.
In fact, its youngest massive stars are less than 10 million years old.
Much larger than the open or galactic clusters of young stars
in the disk of our Milky Way galaxy,
NGC 206
spans about 4,000 light-years.
That's comparable in size to the giant stellar nurseries
NGC 604 in nearby spiral
M33 and the
Tarantula Nebula
in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
APOD: 2023 March 22 – M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is M31, the great
Andromeda Galaxy, over two million
light-years away.
Without a telescope, even this immense
spiral galaxy
appears as an unremarkable, faint,
nebulous cloud in the
constellation Andromeda.
But a bright white nucleus, dark winding dust lanes, luminous blue spiral arms,
and bright red emission nebulas are recorded in
this stunning fifteen-hour telescopic digital mosaic of our
closest major galactic neighbor.
But how do we know
this spiral nebula is really so far away?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis
debate
of 1920.
M31's great distance was determined in the 1920s by
observations that resolved individual stars
that
changed their brightness
in a way that gave up their true distance.
The result proved that
Andromeda is just like our
Milky Way Galaxy -- a conclusion making
the rest of the universe
much
more vast
than had ever been
previously imagined.
APOD: 2023 February 15 – Airglow Sky over France
Explanation:
This unusual sky was both familiar and unfamiliar.
The photographer's mission was to capture the arch of the familiar central band of our
Milky Way Galaxy over a picturesque
medieval manor.
The surprise was that on this January evening, the foreground sky was found
glowing in a beautiful but unfamiliar manner.
The striped bands are called
airglow and they result from air high in
Earth's atmosphere
being excited by the Sun's light and
emitting a faint light of its own.
The bands cross the entire sky -- their curved
appearance
is due to the extremely wide angle of the camera lens.
In the foreground lies
Château
de
Losse
in southwest France.
Other familiar
sky delights dot the distant background including the bright white star
Sirius, the orange planet
Mars,
the blue Pleiades star cluster, the red
California Nebula,
and, on the far right, the extended
Andromeda Galaxy.
The initial mission was also successful: across the top of the frame is the
arching band of our
Milky Way.
APOD: 2023 January 17 – Unexpected Clouds Toward the Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Why are there oxygen-emitting arcs near the direction of the Andromeda galaxy?
No one is sure.
The gas arcs, shown in blue, were
discovered and first
confirmed by
amateur astronomers
just last year.
The two main origin hypotheses for the arcs are that they really are close to Andromeda
(M31),
or that they are just coincidentally placed
gas filaments in our
Milky Way galaxy.
Adding to
the mystery is that arcs were not seen in previous
deep images of M31
taken primarily in light emitted by
hydrogen,
and that other,
more distant galaxies
have not been generally noted as showing similar oxygen-emitting structures.
Dedicated amateurs using commercial telescopes made
this discovery because, in part, professional telescopes usually
investigate
angularly small patches of the night sky,
whereas these arcs span several times the
angular size of the
full moon.
Future observations -- both in light emitted by oxygen and by
other elements -- are sure to follow.
APOD: 2022 December 13 - An Artful Sky over Lofoten Islands
Explanation:
Can the night sky be both art and science?
If so, perhaps the
featured image is an example.
The digital panorama was composed of 10 landscape
and 10 sky images all taken on the same night, from the same location,
and with the same camera.
Iconic features in the image have been artfully brightened,
and the ground nearby was
artfully illuminated.
Visible in the foreground is the
creative photographer
anchoring an amazing view from the rugged
Lofoten Islands of
Norway,
two months ago, by holding a lamp.
Far in the distance are three prominent arches: our
Milky Way Galaxy on the left, while a
scientifically-unusual double-arced
aurora
is documented on the right.
A meteor is highlighted between them.
Other notable skylights include, left to right, the
Andromeda Galaxy, the
planet Jupiter, the
star Vega, and the stars that compose the
Big Dipper
asterism.
APOD: 2022 November 3 - M33: The Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About
3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from the Milky Way,
this
sharp image combines data from telescopes on and around planet
Earth to show off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions along
the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the
cavernous NGC 604
is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 1 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a cosmic yardstick for
establishing
the distance
scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2022 October 24 - Clouds Around Galaxy Andromeda
Explanation:
What are those red clouds surrounding the Andromeda galaxy?
This galaxy, M31, is often imaged by planet Earth-based astronomers.
As the nearest large spiral galaxy, it is a familiar sight
with dark dust lanes, bright yellowish core, and
spiral arms traced
by clouds of bright blue stars.
A mosaic of well-exposed broad and narrow-band image data,
this deep portrait of our
neighboring island universe offers
strikingly unfamiliar features though,
faint reddish clouds of glowing
ionized hydrogen gas in the same wide field of view.
Most of the ionized hydrogen clouds surely
lie in the foreground of the scene, well within our
Milky Way Galaxy.
They are likely associated with the pervasive, dusty
interstellar cirrus
clouds scattered hundreds of
light-years above our own
galactic plane.
Some of the clouds, however, occur right in the
Andromeda galaxy itself, and some in
M110,
the small galaxy just below.
APOD: 2022 October 21 - Andromeda in Southern Skies
Explanation:
Looking north from
southern New Zealand,
the Andromeda Galaxy never gets more than
about five degrees above the horizon.
As spring comes to the southern hemisphere, in late September
Andromeda is highest in the sky around midnight though.
In a single 30 second exposure this telephoto image tracked
the stars to capture the closest large spiral galaxy
from Mount John Observatory as it
climbed just over the rugged peaks of the
south island's Southern Alps.
In the foreground, stars are reflected in the still waters of
Lake Alexandrina.
Also known as M31,
the Andromeda Galaxy is one of the brightest objects in the
Messier catalog,
usually visible to the unaided eye as a small, faint, fuzzy patch.
But this
clear, dark sky
and long exposure reveal
the galaxy's greater extent in planet Earth's night,
spanning nearly 6 full moons.
APOD: 2022 August 7 - Meteor before Galaxy
Explanation:
What's that green streak in front of the Andromeda galaxy?
A meteor.
While photographing the
Andromeda galaxy in 2016,
near the peak of the
Perseid
Meteor
Shower,
a small pebble from deep space
crossed right in front of our
Milky Way Galaxy's far-distant companion.
The small
meteor
took only a fraction of a second to pass through this 10-degree field.
The meteor flared
several times while braking violently upon entering
Earth's atmosphere.
The green color
was created, at least in part, by the meteor's gas glowing as it vaporized.
Although the exposure was timed to catch a
Perseid meteor,
the orientation of the imaged streak seems a better match to a meteor from the
Southern Delta Aquariids, a
meteor shower that peaked a few weeks earlier.
Not coincidentally, the
Perseid Meteor Shower peaks
later this week, although
this year
the meteors will have to outshine a
sky brightened by a nearly full moon.
APOD: 2022 July 27 - Crepuscular Moon Rays over Denmark
Explanation:
This moon made quite an entrance.
Typically, a
moonrise is quiet and serene.
Taking a few minutes to fully peek above the horizon,
Earth's largest orbital companion can remain
relatively obscure
until it rises high in the nighttime sky.
About a week ago, however, and despite being only half lit by
the Sun, this rising moon put on a show --
at least from this location.
The reason was that, as seen from
Limfjord in
Nykøbing Mors,
Denmark,
the moon rose below scattered clouds near the horizon.
The result, captured here in a single exposure, was that
moonlight poured through gaps in the clouds
to created what are called
crepuscular rays.
These rays can fan out
dramatically across the sky when starting near the horizon, and
can even appear to
converge on the other side of the sky.
Well behind
our Moon, stars from our
Milky Way galaxy dot the background,
and our galaxy's largest orbital companion
-- the
Andromeda galaxy --
can be found on the upper left.
APOD: 2022 July 11 - Andromeda over the Sahara Desert
Explanation:
What is the oldest thing you can see?
At 2.5 million
light years distant, the answer for the unaided
eye is the
Andromeda galaxy,
because its photons are 2.5 million years old when they reach you.
Most other apparent denizens of the night sky --
stars, clusters, and nebulae --
appear as they were only a few hundred to a few thousand years ago,
as they lie well within our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Given its distance, light from
Andromeda
is likely also the farthest object that you can see.
Also known as M31, the Andromeda Galaxy dominates the center of the featured
zoomed image,
taken from the Sahara Desert in
Morocco last month.
The featured image is a combination of three background and
one foreground exposure --
all taken with the same camera and from the same location
and on the same calendar day -- with the foreground image taken during the
evening
blue hour.
M110, a
satellite galaxy of Andromenda is visible just above and to the left of M31's core.
As cool
as it may be to see this neighboring galaxy to our Milky Way with your own eyes,
long duration camera exposures
can pick up many faint and breathtaking details.
Recent data indicates that
our Milky Way Galaxy
will collide and combine with the
similarly-sized Andromeda galaxy in a few billion years.
APOD: 2022 June 6 - Milky Way Galaxy Doomed: Collision with Andromeda Pending
Explanation:
Will our Milky Way Galaxy collide one day with its larger neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy?
Most likely, yes.
Careful plotting of slight displacements of M31's stars
relative to background galaxies on recent
Hubble Space Telescope images indicate that the center of M31 could be on a direct
collision course with the center of our home
galaxy.
Still, the errors in sideways velocity appear sufficiently large to admit a
good chance that the central parts of the two galaxies will miss, slightly, but will become
close enough for their outer halos to become gravitationally
entangled.
Once that happens, the two galaxies will become bound,
dance around, and
eventually merge to
become one large
elliptical galaxy --
over the next few billion years.
Pictured here is a combination of images depicting
the sky of a world (Earth?) in the distant future when the outer parts of each galaxy
begin to collide.
The exact future of our Milky Way and the entire surrounding
Local Group of Galaxies
is likely to remain an active
topic of research for years to come.
APOD: 2022 June 3 - A 10,000 Kilometer Galactic Bridge
Explanation:
With this creative astro-collaboration you can follow the plane of
our Milky Way Galaxy as it bridges northern and southern
hemisphere skies.
To construct the expansive composite nightscape,
skies over Observatorio El Sauce in Chile (top)
were imaged on the same date but 6 hours later than
the skies over the Saint-Veran observatory in the French Alps.
The 6 hour time-lag allowed Earth's rotation to align
the Milky Way above
domes at the two sites.
All exposures were made with similar cameras and lenses mounted on simple
tripods.
A faint greenish airglow is visible in the
dark Chilean sky that also features the Large
and Small Magellanic Clouds near the observatory dome.
In the French Alps light pollution is apparent,
but the distant Andromeda Galaxy can still be spotted near the horizon
in the northern night.
On
planet Earth
the two observatories are separated by about 10,000 kilometers.
APOD: 2022 May 23 - The Once and Future Stars of Andromeda
Explanation:
This picture of Andromeda shows not only where stars are now,
but where stars will soon be.
Of course, the big, beautiful
Andromeda Galaxy, M31, is a
spiral galaxy -- and a mere 2.5 million
light-years away.
Both space-based and ground-based observatories have been
here combined to produce
this intriguing composite image of Andromeda, at wavelengths both inside and outside normally visible light.
The visible light shows where M31's stars are now -- as highlighted in white and blue hues and imaged by the
Hubble,
Subaru, and
Mayall telescopes.
The infrared light shows where M31's future stars will soon form -- as highlighted in orange hues and imaged by NASA's
Spitzer Space Telescope.
The infrared light tracks enormous
lanes of dust,
warmed by stars, sweeping along Andromeda's spiral arms.
This dust is a tracer of the galaxy's vast interstellar gas -- the raw material for future
star formation.
These new stars will likely form over the next hundred million years,
surely
well before Andromeda
merges with our
Milky Way Galaxy in about 5 billion years.
APOD: 2022 March 1 - Dueling Bands in the Night
Explanation:
What are these two bands in the sky?
The more commonly seen band is the one on the right and is the central band of
our Milky Way galaxy.
Our Sun orbits in the disk of this
spiral galaxy, so that from inside, this disk
appears as a band
of comparable brightness all the way around the sky.
The Milky Way band
can also be seen all year -- if out
away from
city lights.
The less commonly seem band, on the left, is
zodiacal light --
sunlight reflected from dust orbiting the Sun in our Solar System.
Zodiacal light
is brightest near the Sun and so is best seen just before sunrise or just after sunset.
On some evenings in the north,
particularly during the months of March and April, this ribbon of
zodiacal light
can appear quite prominent after sunset.
It was determined only this century that
zodiacal dust was mostly expelled by comets that have passed
near Jupiter.
Only on certain times of the year will the two bands be seen side by side,
in parts of the sky, like this.
The featured image, including the
Andromeda galaxy and a meteor,
was captured in late January over a frozen lake in
Kanding,
Sichuan,
China.
APOD: 2022 February 26 - Nearby Spiral Galaxy NGC 4945
Explanation:
Large spiral galaxy NGC 4945 is seen nearly
edge-on
in this cosmic galaxy close-up.
It's almost the size of our
Milky Way Galaxy.
NGC 4945's own dusty disk, young blue star clusters, and pink star
forming regions stand out in the colorful telescopic frame.
About 13 million light-years distant toward the
expansive
southern constellation
Centaurus,
NGC 4945 is only about six times farther away than Andromeda,
the nearest large spiral galaxy to the Milky Way.
Though this galaxy's central region is largely hidden from
view for optical telescopes, X-ray and infrared observations indicate
significant
high energy emission and star formation in the core
of NGC 4945.
Its obscured but active nucleus qualifies the gorgeous island
universe as a Seyfert galaxy
and home to a central supermassive black hole.
APOD: 2022 January 29 - The Fornax Cluster of Galaxies
Explanation:
Named for the southern
constellation
toward which most of its galaxies can be found, the
Fornax
Cluster is one of the closest clusters of galaxies.
About 62 million light-years away, it is almost 20 times more
distant than our neighboring
Andromeda Galaxy, and
only about 10 percent farther than the better known and more
populated Virgo Galaxy Cluster.
Seen across this two degree wide field-of-view, almost every
yellowish splotch on the image is an elliptical galaxy in the
Fornax
cluster.
Elliptical galaxies
NGC 1399 and NGC 1404
are the dominant, bright cluster members toward the upper left
(but not the spiky foreground stars).
A standout barred spiral galaxy
NGC 1365
is visible on the lower right as a prominent Fornax cluster member.
APOD: 2022 January 19 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is
M31,
the great Andromeda Galaxy.
Even at some two and a half million
light-years distant,
this immense spiral galaxy -- spanning over
200,000 light years -- is visible, although as a faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
In contrast, a bright yellow nucleus, dark winding
dust lanes, and
expansive spiral arms dotted with
blue star clusters and
red nebulae,
are recorded in
this stunning telescopic image
which combines data from
orbiting Hubble with ground-based images from
Subaru and
Mayall.
In only about 5 billion years, the Andromeda galaxy may be even
easier to see -- as it will likely span the
entire night sky -- just before it
merges with our
Milky Way Galaxy.
APOD: 2021 November 12 - M33: The Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth,
this sharp image
shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions along
the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the
cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 4 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a cosmic yardstick for
establishing
the distance
scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2021 November 6 - The Galaxy Between Two Friends
Explanation:
On an August night two friends
enjoyed this view after
a day's hike on the Plateau d'Emparis in the French Alps.
At 2400 meters altitude the sky was clear.
Light from a setting moon illuminates the foreground
captured in the simple vertical panorama of images.
Along the plane of our Milky Way galaxy
stars of Cassiopeia and Perseus shine along the panorama's left edge.
But seen as a faint cloud with a brighter core, the
Andromeda galaxy,
stands directly above the two friends in the night.
The nearest large spiral galaxy, Andromeda is about
2.5 million light-years beyond the stars of the Milky Way.
Adding to the evening's shared
extragalactic
perspective, the fainter fuzzy spot in the sky right between them is
M33, also known as the Triangulum galaxy.
Third largest in the
local galaxy group, after Andromeda and
Milky Way, the Triangulum galaxy is about 3 million light-years distant.
On that night, the two friends stood about 3
light-nanoseconds
apart.
APOD: 2021 November 4 - NGC 147 and NGC 185
Explanation:
Dwarf galaxies
NGC 147
(left) and
NGC 185
stand side by side in this sharp telescopic portrait.
The two are not-often-imaged satellites of M31, the
great spiral Andromeda Galaxy,
some 2.5 million light-years away.
Their separation on the sky, less than one degree across a pretty
field of view, translates to only about 35 thousand light-years at Andromeda's
distance, but Andromeda itself is found well outside this frame.
Brighter and more famous satellite galaxies of Andromeda,
M32 and M110, are
seen closer to the great spiral.
NGC 147 and NGC 185
have been identified as binary galaxies, forming
a gravitationally stable binary system.
But recently discovered faint
dwarf galaxy Cassiopeia II
also seems to
be part of their system, forming a gravitationally bound group
within Andromeda's intriguing population of small
satellite galaxies.
APOD: 2021 September 8 - The Deep Sky Toward Andromeda
Explanation:
What surrounds the Andromeda galaxy?
Out in space, Andromeda (M31) is closely surrounded by several small
satellite galaxies, and further out it is part of the
Local Group of Galaxies -- of which our Milky Way galaxy is also a member.
On the sky, however, gas clouds local to
our Milky Way appear to surround M31 --
not unlike how water clouds in
Earth's atmosphere may appear to
encompass our Moon.
The gas clouds toward Andromeda,
however, are usually too faint to see.
Enter the
featured 45-degree long image
-- one of the deeper images yet taken of the
broader Andromeda region.
This image, sensitive to light specifically
emitted by hydrogen gas, shows these faint and unfamiliar clouds in
tremendous detail.
But the image captures more.
At the image top is the
Triangulum galaxy (M33),
the third largest galaxy in the
Local Group and the furthest object that can be seen with the unaided eye.
Below M33 is the bright Milky-Way star
Mirach.
The image is the digital accumulation of
several long exposures taken from 2018 to 2021 from
Pulsnitz,
Germany.
APOD: 2021 August 14 - Island Universe, Cosmic Sand
Explanation:
Stars in our own Milky Way Galaxy are scattered through this
eye-catching field of view.
From the early hours after midnight on August 13,
the 30 second exposure of the night sky over Busko-Zdroj, Poland
records the
colorful and bright trail of a
Perseid meteor.
Seen near the peak of the
annual Perseid meteor shower it
flashes from lower left to upper right.
The hurtling grain of cosmic sand, a piece of dust from
periodic comet Swift-Tuttle,
vaporized as it passed through planet Earth's atmosphere
at almost 60 kilometers per second.
Just above and right of center, well beyond the stars of
the Milky Way, lies the island universe
known as M31 or the Andromeda Galaxy.
The Andromeda Galaxy
is the most distant object easily visible to the naked-eye,
about 2.5 million light-years away.
The visible meteor trail begins only about
100 kilometers
above Earth's surface, though.
It points back to the meteor shower radiant
in the constellation Perseus off the lower left edge of the frame.
Follow this bright perseid meteor trail below and left to
the stars of NGC 869and NGC 884, the
double star cluster in Perseus.
APOD: 2021 July 18 - The Andromeda Galaxy in Ultraviolet
Explanation:
What does the Andromeda galaxy look like in ultraviolet light?
Young blue stars circling the galactic center dominate.
A mere 2.5 million light-years away, the
Andromeda Galaxy, also
known as M31, really is just next door as large galaxies go.
Spanning
about 230,000 light-years, it took 11 different image fields from NASA's
Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) satellite
telescope to produce this gorgeous portrait of the
spiral galaxy in
ultraviolet light in 2003.
While its spiral arms stand out in
visible light images,
Andromeda's arms look more like
rings in ultraviolet.
The rings are sites of intense
star formation and have been interpreted as
evidence that Andromeda collided with its smaller neighboring
elliptical galaxy M32 more than 200 million years ago.
The Andromeda galaxy and our own comparable
Milky Way galaxy are the most massive members of the
Local Group
of galaxies and are
projected to collide in several billion years -- perhaps
around the time that our Sun's
atmosphere will expand
to
engulf the Earth.
APOD: 2021 June 25 - Andromeda in a Single Shot
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The
Andromeda Galaxy, 2.5 million light years away, is the most distant
object easily seen by the unaided eye.
Other denizens of the night sky, like stars, clusters, and nebulae,
are typically hundreds to thousands of light-years distant.
That's far beyond the Solar System but well within
our own Milky Way Galaxy.
Also known as M31, the external galaxy poses
directly above a chimney in this well-planned
deep night skyscape
from an old mine in southern Portugal.
The image was captured in a single exposure tracking the sky,
so the foreground is slightly blurred by the camera's motion while
Andromeda itself looms large.
The galaxy's brighter central region, normally all that's
visible to the naked-eye, can be seen extending to spiral arms
with fainter outer reaches spanning over 4 full moons across the sky.
Of course in only 5 billion years or so, the stars of Andromeda could
span the
entire night sky as the Andromeda Galaxy
merges with the Milky Way.
APOD: 2021 April 18 - Rainbow Airglow over the Azores
Explanation:
Why would the sky glow like a giant repeating rainbow?
Airglow.
Now air glows all of the time, but it is usually hard to see.
A disturbance however -- like an approaching storm -- may cause noticeable rippling in the
Earth's atmosphere.
These gravity waves are
oscillations in air analogous to those created when a
rock is thrown in calm water.
The long-duration exposure nearly along the vertical walls of
airglow likely made the undulating structure particularly visible.
OK, but where do the colors originate?
The deep red glow likely originates from
OH molecules
about 87-kilometers high, excited by
ultraviolet light
from the Sun.
The orange and green
airglow
is likely caused by
sodium and
oxygen atoms slightly higher up.
The featured image was captured during a
climb up
Mount Pico in the
Azores of
Portugal.
Ground lights originate from the island of
Faial in the
Atlantic Ocean.
A spectacular sky is visible through this banded airglow, with the central band of our
Milky Way Galaxy running up the image center, and M31, the
Andromeda Galaxy, visible near the top left.
APOD: 2021 January 13 - Arches Across an Arctic Sky
Explanation:
What are these two giant arches across the sky?
Perhaps the more familiar one, on the left, is the central band of our
Milky Way Galaxy.
This grand disk of stars and nebulas here appears to encircle much of the southern sky.
Visible below the stellar arch is the
rusty-orange planet
Mars and the extended
Andromeda galaxy.
For a few minutes during this
cold
arctic night, a second
giant arch appeared to the right,
encircling part of the northern sky: an
aurora.
Auroras are much closer than stars as they are composed of glowing air high in
Earth's atmosphere.
Visible outside the
green auroral arch is the group of stars popularly
known as the
Big Dipper.
The featured digital composite of 18 images was captured in mid-December over the
Lofoten Islands in
Norway.
APOD: 2020 November 25 - Andromeda over Patagonia
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The Andromeda Galaxy
at 2.5 million light years away is the most distant object
easily seen with your unaided
eye.
Most other apparent denizens of the night sky --
stars, clusters, and nebulae --
typically range from a few hundred to a few thousand
light-years away and lie well within our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Given its distance, light from
Andromeda
is likely also the
oldest light that you can see.
Also known as M31, the Andromeda Galaxy dominates the center of the featured
zoomed image,
taken from the
dunes of BahÃa Creek,
Patagonia, in southern
Argentina.
The image is a combination of 45 background images with one foreground image --
all taken with the same camera and from the same location within 90 minutes.
M110, a
satellite galaxy of Andromenda is visible just below and to the left of M31's core.
As cool
as it may be to see this neighboring galaxy to our Milky Way with your own eyes,
long duration camera exposures
can pick up many faint and breathtaking details.
Recent data indicates that
our Milky Way Galaxy
will collide and combine with the
similarly-sized Andromeda galaxy in a few billion years.
APOD: 2020 October 21 - A Night Sky Vista from Sardinia
Explanation:
How many famous sky objects can you find in this image?
The featured dark sky composite combines over
60 exposures spanning over 220 degrees to create
a veritable menagerie of night sky wonders.
Visible celestial icons include the
Belt of Orion, the
Orion Nebula, the
Andromeda Galaxy, the
California Nebula, and bright stars
Sirius and
Betelgeuse.
You can verify that you found these, if you did, by checking an
annotated version of the image.
A bit harder, though, is finding
Polaris and the
Big Dipper.
Also discernible are several meteors from the Quandrantids meteor shower, red and green
airglow,
and two friends of the astrophotographer.
The picture was captured in January from
Sardinia,
Italy.
You can
see sky wonders in your own
night sky tonight -- including more meteors than usual --
because tonight is near
peak of the yearly Orionids meteor shower.
APOD: 2020 October 18 - UGC 1810: Wildly Interacting Galaxy from Hubble
Explanation:
What's happening to this spiral galaxy?
Although details remain uncertain,
it surely has to do with an ongoing battle with its smaller galactic neighbor.
The
featured galaxy
is labelled UGC 1810 by itself, but together with its
collisional partner is known as
Arp 273.
The overall shape of UGC 1810 -- in particular its
blue outer ring --
is likely a result of wild and
violent
gravitational
interactions.
This ring's blue color is caused by massive stars that are
blue hot
and have formed only in the past few million years.
The inner galaxy appears older, redder, and threaded with cool
filamentary dust.
A few bright
stars appear well in the foreground, unrelated to
UGC 1810, while several galaxies are visible well in the background.
Arp 273 lies about 300 million light years away
toward
the constellation of Andromeda.
Quite likely, UGC 1810 will
devour its
galactic sidekick over the next billion years and settle into a classic
spiral form.
APOD: 2020 October 13 - Mars, Pleiades, and Andromeda over Stone Lions
Explanation:
Three very different -- and very famous -- objects were all captured in a single frame last month.
On the upper left is the bright blue
Pleiades, perhaps the most famous cluster of stars on the night sky.
The Pleiades (M45) is about 450
light years away and easily found a
few degrees from Orion.
On the upper right is the
expansive Andromeda Galaxy,
perhaps the most famous galaxy -- external to our own -- on the night sky.
Andromeda
(M31) is one of few objects visible to the
unaided eye where you can see light that is millions of years old.
In the middle is
bright red Mars, perhaps the most famous planet on the night sky.
Today Mars is at
opposition, meaning that it is opposite the Sun,
with the result that it is visible all night long.
In the foreground is an ancient tomb in the
Phygrian Valley in
Turkey.
The tomb, featuring
two stone lions,
is an impressive remnant of a
powerful civilization
that lived thousands of years ago.
Mars, currently
near its brightest, can be
easily found toward the east just after sunset.
APOD: 2020 September 25 - Moon over Andromeda
Explanation:
The Great Spiral Galaxy
in Andromeda (also known
as M31),
a mere 2.5 million light-years
distant,
is the closest large spiral to our own Milky Way.
Andromeda is visible to the unaided eye as a small, faint, fuzzy patch,
but because its surface brightness is so low, casual
skygazers
can't appreciate the galaxy's impressive extent in
planet Earth's sky.
This entertaining composite image compares the
angular size
of the nearby galaxy
to a brighter, more familiar celestial sight.
In it, a
deep
exposure of Andromeda, tracing beautiful blue star
clusters in spiral arms far beyond the bright yellow core,
is combined with a typical view of a nearly full Moon.
Shown at the same
angular scale, the Moon covers
about 1/2 degree on the
sky, while the galaxy is clearly several times that size.
The deep Andromeda exposure also includes two bright satellite
galaxies, M32 and
M110 (below and right).
APOD: 2020 September 3 - A Halo for Andromeda
Explanation:
M31, the Andromeda Galaxy, is the closest large spiral galaxy to
our Milky Way.
Some 2.5 million light-years distant it shines in Earth's night sky as a
small, faint, elongated cloud just visible to the unaided eye.
Invisible to the eye though, its enormous halo of hot ionized gas is
represented in purplish hues for
this digital illustration
of our neighboring galaxy
above rocky terrain.
Mapped by Hubble Space Telescope observations of the
absorption of ultraviolet light against
distant quasars, the extent and make-up of Andromeda's gaseous halo has been
recently determined by the AMIGA project.
A reservoir of material for future star formation,
Andromeda's halo of diffuse
plasma was measured
to extend around 1.3 million light-years or more from the galaxy.
That's about half way to the Milky Way,
likely putting it in contact with the diffuse gaseous halo of our own
galaxy.
APOD: 2020 July 26 – A Flight through the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
Explanation:
What would it look like to fly through the distant universe?
To find out, a team of astronomers estimated the relative distances
to over 5,000 galaxies in one of the most distant fields of galaxies ever imaged: the
Hubble Ultra Deep Field
(HUDF).
Because it takes light a long time to cross the universe, most galaxies visible in the
featured video
are seen when the universe was only a fraction of its current age, were
still forming, and have unusual shapes when compared to modern galaxies.
No mature looking spiral galaxies such as our
Milky Way or the
Andromeda galaxy yet exist.
Toward the end of the video the
virtual observer flies past the
farthest galaxies
in the HUDF field, recorded to have a
redshift past 8.
This early class of low luminosity
galaxies likely contained
energetic stars emitting light that
transformed much of the
remaining normal matter
in the universe from a cold gas to a hot ionized
plasma.
APOD: 2020 April 30 - Andromeda Island Universe
Explanation:
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is
M31,
the great
Andromeda Galaxy
some two and a half million light-years away.
But without a telescope, even this
immense spiral galaxy - spanning over
200,000 light years - appears as a faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
In contrast, a bright yellow nucleus, dark winding dust lanes,
expansive blue spiral arms and star clusters are recorded in this
stunning telescopic image.
While even casual skygazers
are now inspired by the knowledge that there are
many distant galaxies like M31, astronomers
debated
this fundamental concept 100 years ago.
Were these "spiral nebulae" simply outlying components of our own
Milky Way Galaxy or were they instead "island universes",
distant systems of stars comparable to the Milky Way itself?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis debate of 1920,
which was later
resolved by observations
of M31 in favor of Andromeda,
island universe.
APOD: 2020 April 26 - Edwin Hubble Discovers the Universe
Explanation:
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 Great Debate.
Many astronomers then believed that our
Milky Way Galaxy was the entire universe.
Many others, though, believed that our galaxy was just
one of many.
In the
Great Debate,
each argument was detailed, but no consensus was reached.
The answer came over three years later with the detected variation
of single spot in the
Andromeda Nebula, as shown on the
original glass discovery plate digitally reproduced here.
When Edwin Hubble
compared images, he noticed that this
spot varied, and so wrote "VAR!" on the plate.
The best explanation, Hubble knew, was that this spot was the
image of a variable star that was very far away.
So M31 was really the
Andromeda Galaxy --
a galaxy possibly similar to our own.
The
featured image
may not be pretty, but the variable spot on it
opened a door
through which humanity gazed knowingly, for the first time, into a
surprisingly vast cosmos.
APOD: 2020 March 27 - A Little Drop of Galaxy
Explanation:
A drop of water
seems to hold an entire galaxy in this
creative macro-astrophotograph.
In the imaginative work of cosmic nature photography
a close-up lens was used to image
a previously made picture of a galaxy,
viewed through a water drop suspended from a stem.
A favorite of many telescope-wielding astroimagers,
the galaxy is the
Andromeda Galaxy, also known as M31.
About 100,000 light-years across that majestic galaxy's
spiral arms and dust lanes
are curved and distorted
in the image contained in the centimeter-sized droplet.
Andromeda is some 2.5 million light-years distant,
but this project was still
carried out while
spending time indoors.
APOD: 2020 March 26 - Andromeda Station
Explanation:
This surreal picture isn't from a special effects sci-fi movie.
It is a digital composite of frames of the
real Andromeda Galaxy,
also known as M31, rising over a real mountain.
Exposures tracking the galaxy and background stars
have been digitally combined with separate
exposures of the foreground terrain.
All background and foreground
exposures
were made back to back
with the same camera and telephoto lens on the same night
from the same location.
In the "Deepscape" combination they produce a stunning image that reveals
a range of brightness and color that your eye can't quite see on its own.
Still, it does look like you could ride a cable car up this mountain
and get off at the station right next to Andromeda.
But at 2.5 million light-years from Earth the big beautiful spiral
galaxy really is a little out of reach as a destination.
Don't worry, though.
Just wait 5 billion years and the
Andromeda Galaxy will come to you.
This Andromeda Station is better known as Weisshorn, the highest peak of
the ski area in Arosa, Switzerland.
APOD: 2020 February 27 - Two Hemisphere Night Sky
Explanation:
The Sun is hidden by a horizon that runs across the middle
in this two hemisphere view of
Earth's night sky.
The digitally stitched mosaics were
recorded from corresponding latitudes, one 29 degrees north
and one 29 degrees south of the planet's equator.
On top is the northern view from the
IAC
observatory at La Palma
taken in February 2020.
Below is a well-matched southern scene from the
ESO La Silla Observatory recorded in April 2016.
In this projection, the Milky Way runs almost vertically above
and below the horizon.
Its dark clouds and and bright nebulae are prominent near the galactic
center in the lower half of the frame.
In the upper half, brilliant Venus is immersed in
zodiacal light.
Sunlight faintly scattered by interplanetary dust,
the zodiacal light traces the
Solar System's
ecliptic plane in a complete circle through the starry sky.
Large telescope domes bulge along the inverted horizon from La Silla
while at La Palma, multi-mirror Magic telescopes stand above center.
Explore this two
hemisphere night sky and you can also find the Andromeda
Galaxy and the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds.
APOD: 2019 December 31 - M33: The Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth, this
sharp image
shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions along
the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the
cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 7 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a cosmic yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2019 November 20 - Arp 273: Battling Galaxies from Hubble
Explanation:
What's happening to these spiral galaxies?
Although details remain
uncertain, there sure seems to be a titanic battle going on.
The
upper galaxy
is labelled UGC 1810 by itself, but together with its
collisional partners is known as
Arp 273.
The overall shape of the UGC 1810 -- in particular its
blue outer ring --
is likely a result of wild and
violent
gravitational
interactions.
The blue color of the outer ring at the top is caused by massive stars that are
blue hot
and have formed only in the past few million years.
The inner part of the upper galaxy -- itself an older spiral galaxy -- appears redder and threaded with cool
filamentary dust.
A few bright
stars appear well in the foreground, unrelated to
colliding galaxies, while several far-distant galaxies are visible in the background.
Arp 273 lies about 300 million light years away
toward
the constellation of Andromeda.
Quite likely, UGC 1810 will
devour its
galactic sidekicks over the next billion years and settle into a classic
spiral form.
APOD: 2019 October 14 - Andromeda before Photoshop
Explanation:
What does the Andromeda galaxy really look like?
The
featured image shows how our
Milky Way Galaxy's closest major
galactic neighbor really appears in a long exposure through
Earth's busy skies and with a digital camera that introduces normal imperfections.
The picture is a stack of 223 images, each a 300 second exposure,
taken from a garden observatory in
Portugal over the past year.
Obvious image deficiencies include bright parallel
airplane trails, long and continuous
satellite trails, short
cosmic ray streaks, and
bad pixels.
These imperfections were actually not removed with
Photoshop
specifically, but rather
greatly reduced
with a series of computer software packages that included
Astro Pixel Processor, DeepSkyStacker, and PixInsight.
All of this work was done not to
deceive you with a
digital fantasy
that has little to do with the real likeness of the
Andromeda galaxy (M31),
but to minimize Earthly artifacts that have nothing
to do with the distant galaxy and so better recreate
what M31 really does look like.
APOD: 2019 September 9 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is M31, the great
Andromeda Galaxy, over two million
light-years away.
Without a telescope, even this immense
spiral galaxy
appears as an unremarkable, faint,
nebulous cloud in the
constellation Andromeda.
But a bright yellow nucleus, dark winding dust lanes, luminous blue spiral arms, and bright red emission nebulas are recorded in
this stunning six-hour telescopic digital mosaic of our closest major galactic neighbor.
While even
casual skygazers are now inspired by the knowledge that there are many distant galaxies like M31, astronomers seriously debated this fundamental concept
only 100 years ago.
Were these "spiral nebulae" simply outlying gas clouds in our own
Milky Way Galaxy or were they "island universes" -- distant galaxies of stars comparable to the
Milky Way itself?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis debate of 1920,
which was later resolved by observations favoring Andromeda being just like our
Milky Way Galaxy -- a conclusion making
the rest of the universe
much more vast than many had ever imagined.
APOD: 2019 August 22 - Nearby Spiral Galaxy NGC 4945
Explanation:
Large spiral galaxy NGC 4945 is seen
edge-on
near the center of this
cosmic
galaxy portrait.
In fact, it's almost the size of our
Milky Way Galaxy.
NGC 4945's own dusty disk, young blue star clusters, and pink star forming
regions standout in the sharp, colorful telescopic image.
About 13 million light-years distant toward the
expansive southern
constellation Centaurus,
NGC 4945 is only about six times farther away than Andromeda,
the nearest large spiral galaxy to the Milky Way.
Though this galaxy's central region is largely hidden from
view for optical telescopes, X-ray and infrared observations indicate
significant
high energy emission and star formation in the core
of NGC 4945.
Its obscured but active nucleus qualifies the gorgeous island
universe as a Seyfert galaxy
and home to a central supermassive black hole.
APOD: 2019 February 23 - The Stars of the Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
Like
grains of sand on a cosmic beach, stars of the Triangulum Galaxy
are resolved in this sharp mosaic from the Hubble Space Telescope's
Advanced Camera for Surveys
(ACS).
The inner region of the galaxy spanning over
17,000 light-years is covered at extreme resolution, the
second
largest image ever released by Hubble.
At its center is the bright, densely packed galactic core surrounded by
a loose array of dark dust lanes mixed with the stars in
the galactic plane.
Also known as M33, the face-on spiral galaxy lies 3 million light-years
away in the small northern constellation Triangulum.
Over 50,000 light-years in diameter, the
Triangulum Galaxy is the
third largest in the
Local Group
of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our own Milky Way.
Of course, to fully appreciate the Triangulum's stars, star clusters,
and bright nebulae captured in this Hubble mosaic, you'll need to
use a
zoom tool.
APOD: 2018 December 17 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
What is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy?
Andromeda.
In fact, our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is
frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
featured image of M31 is a digital mosaic of
20 frames taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including exactly how long it will be before it
collides with our home galaxy.
APOD: 2018 October 19 - Summer to Winter Milky Way
Explanation:
Taken near local midnight, this autumn night's panorama follows the
arch of the Milky Way across the northern horizon from the
High Fens, Eifel Nature Park at the border of Belgium and Germany.
Shift your gaze across
the wetlands from west to east (left to right) and you
can watch stars once more prominent in northern summer give way to
those that will soon dominate northern winter nights.
Setting, wanderer Mars is brightest at the far left,
still shining against
almost overwhelming
city lights along the southwestern horizon.
Bright stars Altair, Deneb, and Vega form the northern sky's
summer triangle,
straddling the Milky Way left of center.
Part of the
winter hexagon Capella and Aldebaran,
along with the beautiful Pleiades star cluster
shine across the northeastern sky.
The line-of-sight along the hikers boardwalk leads almost directly
toward the Big Dipper, an
all season asterism from these northern
latitudes.
Follow the Big Dipper's pointer stars to
Polaris and the north celestial pole nearly centered above it.
Andromeda, the other large galaxy
in the skyscape, is near the top of the frame.
APOD: 2018 September 27 - M33: Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth, this
sharp image
shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions along
the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the
cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 7 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a cosmic yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2018 August 12 - Meteor before Galaxy
Explanation:
What's that green streak in front of the Andromeda galaxy?
A meteor.
While photographing the
Andromeda galaxy in 2016,
near the peak of the
Perseid
Meteor
Shower, a sand-sized rock from deep space
crossed right in front of our
Milky Way Galaxy's far-distant companion.
The small
meteor
took only a fraction of a second to pass through this 10-degree field.
The meteor flared
several times while braking violently upon entering
Earth's atmosphere.
The green color
was created, at least in part, by the meteor's gas glowing as it vaporized.
Although the exposure was timed to catch a
Perseids meteor,
the orientation of the imaged streak seems a better match to a meteor from the
Southern Delta Aquariids, a
meteor shower that peaked a few weeks earlier.
Not coincidentally, the
Perseid Meteor Shower peaks
again tonight.
APOD: 2018 May 23 - Spiral Galaxy NGC 4038 in Collision
Explanation:
This galaxy is having a bad millennium.
In fact, the past 100 million years haven't been so good,
and probably the next billion or so will be quite tumultuous.
Visible toward the lower right, NGC 4038 used to be a normal spiral galaxy, minding its own business, until NGC 4039, to its upper left,
crashed into it.
The evolving wreckage, known famously as
the Antennae, is featured here.
As gravity restructures each galaxy, clouds of gas slam into each other,
bright blue knots of stars form, massive stars form and
explode,
and brown filaments of dust are strewn about.
Eventually the
two galaxies
will converge into one larger spiral galaxy.
Such collisions are not unusual, and even our own
Milky Way Galaxy
has undergone several in the past and is
predicted to collide
with our neighboring
Andromeda Galaxy in a few billion years.
The
frames that compose this image were taken by the orbiting
Hubble Space Telescope by professional astronomers to
better understand galaxy collisions.
These frames -- and many other deep space images from
Hubble -- have since been
made public,
allowing interested amateurs to download and
process them into, for example, this visually stunning composite.
APOD: 2018 January 8 - Clouds of Andromeda
Explanation:
What are those red clouds surrounding the Andromeda galaxy?
This galaxy, M31, is often imaged by planet Earth-based astronomers.
As the nearest large spiral galaxy, it is a familiar sight
with dark dust lanes, bright yellowish core, and
spiral arms traced
by clouds of bright blue stars.
A mosaic of well-exposed broad and narrow-band image data,
this colorful portrait of our
neighboring island universe
offers strikingly unfamiliar
features though, faint reddish clouds of glowing
ionized hydrogen gas in the same wide field of view.
These ionized hydrogen clouds surely
lie in the foreground of the scene, well within our
Milky Way Galaxy.
They are likely associated with the pervasive, dusty
interstellar cirrus
clouds scattered hundreds of light-years above our own galactic plane.
APOD: 2017 November 30 - M33: Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth,
this
sharp composite image nicely shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions along
the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the
cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 7 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a cosmic yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2017 November 2 - NGC 891 vs Abell 347
Explanation:
Distant galaxies lie beyond a foreground of spiky
Milky Way stars in this
telescopic
field of view.
Centered on yellowish star HD 14771,
the scene spans about 1 degree on the sky toward the
northern constellation Andromeda.
At top right is large spiral galaxy NGC 891, 100 thousand light-years
across and seen almost exactly edge-on.
About 30 million light-years distant, NGC 891 looks a lot like our own
Milky Way with a flattened, thin, galactic disk.
Its disk and central bulge are cut
along the middle by dark,
obscuring dust clouds.
Scattered toward the lower left are members of
galaxy
cluster Abell 347.
Nearly 240 million light-years away,
Abell 347 shows off its own
large galaxies in the sharp image.
They are similar to NGC 891 in physical size but located almost
8 times farther away, so Abell 347 galaxies have roughly one eighth the
apparent size
of NGC 891.
APOD: 2017 August 10 - Night of the Perseids
Explanation:
This weekend,
meteors will rain down near the peak of the annual
Perseid Meteor Shower.
Normally bright and colorful, the Perseid shower meteors are
produced by dust swept up by planet Earth from the orbit
of Comet Swift-Tuttle.
They streak
from a radiant in Perseus, above the horizon
in clear predawn skies.
Despite interfering light from August's waning gibbous moon,
this year's Perseids
will still be enjoyable,
especially if you can find yourself in an open space,
away from city lights, and in good company.
Frames used in this composite view
capture bright Perseid meteors from the 2016 meteor
shower set against a starry background along the Milky Way,
with even the faint
Andromeda Galaxy just above center.
In the foreground, astronomers of all ages have gathered on a hill
above the Slovakian
village of Vrchtepla.
APOD: 2017 May 10 - UGC 1810: Wildly Interacting Galaxy from Hubble
Explanation:
What's happening to this spiral galaxy?
Although details remain uncertain, it surely has to do with an ongoing battle with its smaller galactic neighbor.
The
featured galaxy
is labelled UGC 1810 by itself, but together with its
collisional partner is known as
Arp 273.
The overall shape of the UGC 1810 -- in particular its
blue outer ring --
is likely a result of wild and
violent
gravitational
interactions.
This ring's blue color is caused by massive stars that are
blue hot
and have formed only in the past few million years.
The inner galaxy appears older, redder, and threaded with cool
filamentary dust.
A few bright
stars appear well in the foreground, unrelated to
UGC 1810, while several galaxies are visible well in the background.
Arp 273 lies about 300 million light years away
toward
the constellation of Andromeda.
Quite likely, UGC 1810 will
devour its
galactic sidekick over the next billion years and settle into a classic
spiral form.
APOD: 2017 March 3 - Sivan 2 to M31
Explanation:
From within the boundaries of the constellation Cassiopeia (left) to
Andromeda (right),
this telescopic
mosaic spans over 10 degrees in planet Earth's skies.
The celestial scene is constructed of panels
that are part of a high-resolution astronomical
survey of the Milky Way in
hydrogen-alpha light.
Processing the monochromatic image data has brought out the
region's faintest structures, relatively
unexplored
filaments of hydrogen gas
near the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy.
Large but faint and also relatively unknown nebula
Sivan 2 is at the
upper left in the field.
The nearby Andromeda Galaxy, M31, is at center right,
while the faint, pervasive hydrogen nebulosities stretch towards
M31 across the foreground in the wide field of view.
The broad survey image demonstrates the intriguing
faint hydrogen clouds
recently imaged by astronomer
Rogelio Bernal Andreo really are within the Milky Way,
along the line-of-sight
to the Andromeda Galaxy.
APOD: 2017 January 12 - Edge On NGC 891
Explanation:
Large spiral galaxy NGC 891 spans about 100 thousand light-years
and is seen almost exactly edge-on from our perspective.
In fact, about 30 million light-years distant in the constellation
Andromeda, NGC 891 looks a
lot like our Milky Way.
At first glance, it has a
flat,
thin, galactic disk of stars and
a central bulge cut along the middle by
regions of dark obscuring dust.
But remarkably apparent in NGC 891's
edge-on presentation are filaments
of dust that extend hundreds of
light-years above and below the center line.
The dust has likely been blown out of the disk
by supernova explosions or intense
star formation activity.
Fainter galaxies can also be seen near the edge-on disk
in this deep
portrait
of NGC 891.
(Editor's Note:
The NGC 891 image used in today's APOD posting has been replaced
and the credit corrected to indicate the author of the original
work.)
APOD: 2017 January 5 - Peculiar Galaxies of Arp 273
Explanation:
The spiky stars in the foreground of this
sharp cosmic
portrait are well within our own
Milky Way
Galaxy.
The two eye-catching galaxies lie far
beyond the Milky Way,
at a distance of over 300 million light-years.
Their distorted appearance is due to gravitational tides
as the pair engage
in
close encounters.
Cataloged
as
Arp 273 (also as UGC 1810), the galaxies do look
peculiar,
but interacting galaxies are now understood to be
common in the universe.
In fact, the nearby large spiral Andromeda Galaxy is known to be
some 2 million light-years away and approaching the Milky Way.
Arp 273 may offer an analog of their
far future encounter.
Repeated galaxy encounters on a
cosmic timescale can ultimately
result in a merger into a single galaxy of stars.
From our perspective, the bright cores of the Arp 273 galaxies are
separated by only a little over 100,000 light-years.
APOD: 2017 January 4 - Clouds of Andromeda
Explanation:
The beautiful Andromeda Galaxy is often imaged by
planet Earth-based astronomers.
Also known as M31, the nearest large spiral galaxy is a familiar sight
with dark dust lanes, bright yellowish core, and
spiral arms traced by
blue starlight.
A mosaic of well-exposed broad and narrow-band image data, this
colorful,
premier portrait of our
neighboring island universe
offers strikingly unfamiliar
features though, faint reddish clouds of glowing
ionized hydrogen gas in the same wide field of view.
Still, the ionized hydrogen clouds likely
lie in the foreground of the scene, well within our Milky Way Galaxy.
They could be associated with the pervasive, dusty
interstellar cirrus
clouds scattered hundreds of light-years above our own galactic plane.
If they were located at the 2.5 million light-year distance of the
Andromeda Galaxy they would be enormous,
since the Andromeda Galaxy itself is 200,000 or so light-years across.
APOD: 2016 December 27 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
What is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy?
Andromeda.
In fact, our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is
frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
featured image of
M31
is a digital mosaic of several
frames taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including exactly how
many billions of years it will before it
collides with our home galaxy.
APOD: 2016 November 12 - NGC 891 vs Abell 347
Explanation:
Galaxies
abound in this well-chosen field of view that spans
about 1 degree on the sky toward the northern constellation Andromeda.
At top right is large spiral galaxy NGC 891, 100 thousand light-years
across and seen almost exactly edge-on.
About 30 million light-years distant, NGC 891 looks a lot like our own
Milky Way with a flattened, thin, galactic disk.
Its disk and central bulge are cut
along the middle by dark,
obscuring dust clouds.
Scattered toward the lower left, and beyond a foreground of Milky Way
stars, are members of
galaxy
cluster Abell 347.
Nearly 240 million light-years away,
Abell 347 shows off its own
large galaxies in the sharp telescopic image.
They are similar to NGC 891 in physical size but located almost
8 times farther away, so Abell 347 galaxies have roughly one eighth the
apparent size
of NGC 891.
APOD: 2016 September 17 - M33: Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth,
this sharp
composite image nicely shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions along
the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the
cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 1 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a cosmic yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2016 August 26 - The Milky Way Sets
Explanation:
Under dark skies the
setting of the Milky Way can be a dramatic sight.
Stretching nearly parallel to the horizon, this rich,
edge-on vista
of our galaxy above the dusty Namibian desert stretches from
bright, southern Centaurus (left) to
Cepheus in the north (right).
From early August, the digitally stitched, panoramic night skyscape
captures the Milky Way's congeries of stars and rivers of cosmic dust,
along with colors of nebulae not readily seen with the eye.
Mars, Saturn, and Antares, visible even in more luminous night
skies, form the the bright celestial
triangle just touching the trees
below the galaxy's central bulge.
Of course, our own galaxy is not the only galaxy in the scene.
Two other major members of our local group,
the Andromeda Galaxy and the Triangulum Galaxy,
lie near the right edge of the frame, beyond the
arc of the setting Milky Way.
APOD: 2016 August 17 - Meteor before Galaxy
Explanation:
What's that green streak in front of the Andromeda galaxy?
A meteor.
While photographing the
Andromeda galaxy last Friday,
near the peak of the
Perseid
Meteor
Shower, a sand-sized rock from deep space
crossed right in front of our
Milky Way Galaxy's far-distant companion.
The small
meteor
took only a fraction of a second to pass through this 10-degree field.
The meteor flared
several times while braking violently upon entering
Earth's atmosphere.
The green color
was created, at least in part, by the meteor's gas glowing as it vaporized.
Although the exposure was timed to catch a
Perseids meteor,
the orientation of the imaged streak seems a better match to a meteor from the
Southern Delta Aquariids, a
meteor shower that peaked a few weeks earlier.
APOD: 2016 May 25 - NGC 5078 and Friends
Explanation:
This sharp telescopic
field of view holds two bright galaxies.
Barred spiral
NGC 5101
(top right) and
nearly edge-on system
NGC 5078
are separated
on the sky by about 0.5 degrees or about the apparent width of a full
moon.
Found within the boundaries of the serpentine
constellation Hydra,
both are estimated to be around 90 million light-years away and
similar in size to our own large Milky Way galaxy.
In fact,
if they both lie at the same distance their
projected
separation would be only 800,000 light-years or so.
That's easily less than half the distance between the
Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy.
NGC 5078 is interacting with a smaller companion galaxy, cataloged as
IC 879, seen just left of the larger galaxy's bright core.
Even more distant background galaxies are scattered
around the colorful field.
Some are even visible right through the face-on disk of NGC 5101.
But the prominent spiky stars are in
the foreground, well within our own Milky Way.
APOD: 2016 April 19 - Andromeda on the Rocks
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The
Andromeda Galaxy 2.5 million light years away is the most distant
object easily seen by the unaided eye.
Other apparent denizens of the night sky, stars, clusters, and nebulae,
typically range from a few hundred to a few thousand light-years
away and lie well within
our own Milky Way Galaxy.
Also known as M31, the
Andromeda
Galaxy is the faint smudge near top center of this Earth and skyscape,
taken from eastern Italy, near Monte Conero on the Adriatic sea coast.
From a few centimeters
to a few million light-years,
the picture demonstrates a stunning range of vision.
Though galaxy and
seaside rocks could be seen with the eye on that
clear summer night, no camera captured this view in a single exposure.
Because the stars trailed
above the horizon while the picture was made,
separate exposures tracking the stars were combined
with one of rocks and cliffs made with the camera steadied
to create the tantalizing scene.
APOD: 2016 March 22 - Rainbow Airglow over the Azores
Explanation:
Why would the sky glow like a giant repeating rainbow?
Airglow.
Now air glows all of the time, but it is usually hard to see.
A disturbance however -- like an approaching storm -- may cause noticeable rippling in the
Earth's atmosphere.
These gravity waves are
oscillations in air analogous to those created when a
rock is thrown in calm water.
The long-duration exposure nearly along the vertical walls of
airglow likely made the undulating structure particularly visible.
OK, but where do the colors originate?
The deep red glow likely originates from
OH molecules
about 87-kilometers high, excited by
ultraviolet light from the Sun.
The orange and green
airglow
is likely caused by
sodium and
oxygen atoms slightly higher up.
The featured image was captured during a
climb up
Mount Pico in the
Azores of
Portugal.
Ground lights originate from the island of
Faial in the
Atlantic Ocean.
A spectacular sky is visible through this banded airglow, with the central band of our
Milky Way Galaxy running up the image center, and M31, the
Andromeda Galaxy, visible near the top left.
APOD: 2016 January 7 - High Energy Andromeda
Explanation:
A mere 2.5 million
light-years away, the Andromeda Galaxy, also known
as M31, really is just next door as large galaxies go.
In this (inset) scan, image data from NASA's
Nuclear
Spectrosopic Telescope Array has yielded
the best high-energy X-ray view yet of our large neighboring spiral,
revealing some 40 extreme
sources of X-rays,
X-ray binary star systems that contain a black hole or neutron
star orbiting a more normal stellar companion.
In fact, larger Andromeda and our own Milky Way
are the most massive members of the local galaxy group.
Andromeda is close enough that NuSTAR can examine
its population of X-ray binaries in detail,
comparing them to our own.
The background image
of Andromeda was taken by NASA's Galaxy Evolution
Explorer in energetic ultraviolet light.
APOD: 2016 January 3 - A Starry Night of Iceland
Explanation:
On some nights, the sky is the best show in town.
On this night, the sky was not only the best show in town, but a composite image of the sky
won an international competition for landscape astrophotography.
The featured winning image was taken in 2011 over Jökulsárlón, the largest
glacial lake in
Iceland.
The photographer combined six exposures to capture not only two green
auroral rings, but their reflections off the serene lake.
Visible in the distant background sky is the band of our
Milky Way Galaxy
and the
Andromeda galaxy.
A powerful
coronal mass ejection from the Sun
caused auroras to be seen as far south as
Wisconsin, USA.
Solar activity over the past week has
resulted in auroras just over the past few days.
APOD: 2015 September 26 - M31 versus M33
Explanation:
Separated by about 14 degrees
(28 Full Moons) in planet Earth's sky,
spiral galaxies M31 at left, and M33 are both large members of
the Local
Group, along with our own Milky Way galaxy.
This narrow- and wide-angle,
multi-camera
composite finds details of spiral structure
in both, while the massive neighboring galaxies seem to be balanced
in starry fields either side of
bright Mirach, beta star in
the constellation Andromeda.
Mirach is just 200 light-years from the Sun.
But M31, the Andromeda Galaxy,
is really 2.5 million light-years distant and
M33, the Triangulum Galaxy, is also about
3 million light years away.
Although they look far apart,
M31 and M33 are engaged in a gravitational struggle.
In fact, radio astronomers have
found indications of
a bridge of neutral hydrogen gas that could connect the two,
evidence of a closer encounter in the past.
Based on measurements, gravitational
simulations currently
predict that the Milky Way, M31, and M33
will all undergo mutual close encounters and potentially
mergers, billions of years
in the future.
APOD: 2015 August 30 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
What is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy?
Andromeda.
In fact, our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is
frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
above image of M31 is a digital mosaic of
20 frames taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including exactly how long it will before it
collides with our home galaxy.
APOD: 2015 August 17 - Andromeda Rising over the Alps
Explanation:
Have you ever seen the Andromeda galaxy?
Although
M31
appears as a faint and fuzzy blob to the unaided eye, the light you see will be over two million years old,
making it likely the oldest light you ever will
see directly.
Now rising near a few hours after sunset from mid-latitude northern locations,
Andromeda is
rising earlier
each night and will be visible to northerners all night long starting in September.
The featured image captured
Andromeda rising above the
Italian
Alps last month.
As cool as it may be to see this
neighboring galaxy to our
Milky Way
with your own eyes, long duration camera exposures can pick up many
faint and
breathtaking details.
Recent data indicates that our Milky Way Galaxy
will collide and coalesce
with the slightly larger Andromeda galaxy in a few billion years.
APOD: 2015 July 24 - Ultraviolet Rings of M31
Explanation:
A mere 2.5 million light-years away the Andromeda Galaxy, also
known as M31, really is just next door as large galaxies go.
So close
and spanning
some 260,000 light-years, it took 11 different image fields from the
Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) satellite's
telescope to produce this gorgeous portrait of the spiral galaxy in
ultraviolet light.
While its spiral arms stand out in
visible light images of Andromeda,
the arms look more like rings in
the
GALEX ultraviolet view,
a view dominated by the energetic light from hot, young, massive stars.
As sites of intense star formation, the rings have been interpreted as
evidence Andromeda collided with its smaller neighboring elliptical
galaxy M32 more than 200 million years ago.
The large Andromeda galaxy
and our own Milky Way are the most massive members of the
local
galaxy group.
APOD: 2015 May 28 - Nearby Spiral Galaxy NGC 4945
Explanation:
Large spiral galaxy NGC 4945 is seen
edge-on
near the center of this
cosmic
galaxy portrait.
In fact, NGC 4945 is almost the size of our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Its own dusty disk, young blue star clusters, and pink star forming
regions standout in the sharp, colorful telescopic image.
About 13 million light-years distant toward the
expansive southern
constellation Centaurus,
NGC 4945 is only about six times farther away than Andromeda,
the nearest large spiral galaxy to the Milky Way.
Though the galaxy's central region is largely hidden from
view for optical telescopes, X-ray and infrared observations indicate
significant
high energy emission and star formation in the core
of NGC 4945.
Its obscured but active nucleus qualifies the gorgeous island
universe as a Seyfert galaxy
and home to a central supermassive black hole.
APOD: 2015 April 4 - Voorwerpjes in Space
Explanation:
Mysterious Hanny's Voorwerp,
Dutch for "Hanny's Object", is really enormous,
about the size of the Milky Way Galaxy and glowing strongly
in the greenish light produced by ionized oxygen atoms.
It is thought to be a tidal tail of material left by an
ancient galaxy merger, illuminated and ionized by the outburst of a
quasar inhabiting
the center of distant spiral galaxy IC 2497.
Its exciting 2007 discovery by Dutch schoolteacher
Hanny van Arkel
while participating online in the Galaxy Zoo project
has
since inspired a search and
discovery of eight
more eerie green cosmic features.
Imaged in these panels by the Hubble Space Telescope,
all eight appear near galaxies with energetic cores.
Far outside their
associated galaxies, these objects are
also likely echoes of quasar activity, illuminated only as light
from a core quasar outburst reaches them and ultimately
fading tens of thousands of years after the quasar outburst
itself has faded away.
Of course a galaxy merger like the impending
merger of our own Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy,
could also trigger the birth of a quasar that would
illuminate our distant future version
of Hanny's Voorwerp.
APOD: 2015 February 23 - The Milky Way Over the Arizona Toadstools
Explanation:
Which is older -- the rocks you see on the ground or the light you see from the sky?
Usually it’s the rocks that are older, with their origin sediments deposited well before light left any of the stars or nebulas you see in the sky.
However, if you can see, through a telescope, a distant galaxy far across the universe -- further than
Andromeda or spiral galaxy
NGC 7331 (inset) -- then you are seeing light even more ancient.
Featured here, the central disk of our
Milky Way Galaxy arches over Toadstool
hoodoos rock formations in northern
Arizona,
USA.
The unusual Toadstool rock caps
are relatively hard
sandstone
that wind has eroded more slowly than the softer sandstone underneath.
The green bands are
airglow, light emitted by the stimulated air in
Earth's atmosphere.
On the lower right is a time-lapse camera set up to capture the
sky rotating behind the picturesque foreground scene.
APOD: 2015 January 6 - 100 Million Stars in the Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
What stars compose the Andromeda galaxy?
To better understand, a
group of researchers
studied the
nearby spiral
by composing the largest image ever taken with the
Hubble Space Telescope.
The result, called the
Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT), involved thousands of observations,
hundreds of fields,
spanned about a third of the galaxy, and resolved over 100 million stars.
In the
featured
composite image, the
central part of the galaxy is seen on the far left,
while a blue spiral arm is prominent on the right.
The brightest stars, scattered over the frame, are actually
Milky Way foreground stars.
The PHAT data is being analyzed to
better understand
where and how stars have formed in
M31 in contrast to our
Milky Way Galaxy,
and to identify and characterize Andromeda's
stellar clusters and
obscuring dust.
APOD: 2014 December 13 - The Infrared Visible Andromeda
Explanation:
This
remarkable synthetic color composite image was assembled from
archives of visible light and infrared astronomy image data.
The field of view spans the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), a massive spiral
a mere 2.5 million light-years away.
In fact, with over twice the diameter of
our own Milky Way,
Andromeda is
the largest nearby galaxy.
Andromeda's population of bright young blue stars lie along its sweeping
spiral arms, with the telltale reddish glow of star forming regions
traced in space- and ground-based
visible light data.
But infrared data from the Spitzer
Space Telescope, also blended directly into the detailed composite's
red and green color channels, highlight
the lumpy dust lanes warmed by the young stars
as they wind ever closer to the
galaxy's core.
Otherwise invisible at optical wavelengths, the warm dust takes
on orange hues.
Two smaller companion galaxies,
M110 (below) and
M32 (above) are also included in the frame.
APOD: 2014 December 5 - Milky Way over Moon Valley
Explanation:
Our Milky Way
Galaxy arcs over a
desolate landscape
in this fantastic
panoramic
night skyview.
The otherworldly scene looks across the arid, eroded terrain of the
Valle de la Luna
in the Chilean Atacama desert.
Just along the horizon are lights from San Pedro, Chile,
as well as the small villages of Socaire and Toconao, and
a tortuous road from the city of Calama to San Pedro.
Taken on October 18th, the five panel mosaic
also features the four galaxies easily visible from our
fair planet's dark sky regions.
At the far left, satellite galaxies known as the
Large and Small Magellanic Clouds
are framed by their terrestrial namesakes.
Much fainter and at the right, beyond the Milky Way's central bulge,
is the Andromeda Galaxy.
The most distant in view,
Andromeda lies some 2.5 million light-years away.
APOD: 2014 September 25 - NGC 206 and the Star Clouds of Andromeda
Explanation:
The large stellar association cataloged as
NGC 206 is
nestled within the dusty arms of the neighboring
Andromeda galaxy.
Also known as M31,
the spiral galaxy is a mere
2.5 million light-years away.
NGC 206 is near top center in
this
gorgeous close-up of the southwestern
extent of
Andromeda's disk, a remarkable composite of data from
space and ground-based observatories.
The bright, blue
stars of
NGC 206 indicate its youth.
In fact, its youngest massive stars are less than 10 million years old.
Much larger than the open or galactic clusters of young stars
in the disk of our Milky Way galaxy,
NGC 206
spans about 4,000 light-years.
That's comparable in size to the giant stellar nurseries
NGC 604 in nearby spiral
M33 and the
Tarantula Nebula,
in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
Star forming sites within Andromeda are revealed by the telltale
reddish emission from clouds of ionized hydrogen gas.
APOD: 2014 July 30 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is frequently referred to as
M31
since it is the 31st object on
Messier's
list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
above image of M31 was taken with a standard camera
through a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including how it acquired
its unusual
double-peaked center.
APOD: 2014 February 8 - NGC 5101 and Friends
Explanation:
This sharp telescopic
field of view
holds two bright galaxies.
Barred spiral
NGC 5101
(top right) and
nearly edge-on system
NGC 5078
are separated
on the sky by about 0.5 degrees or about the apparent width of a full moon.
Found within the boundaries of the serpentine
constellation
Hydra,
both are estimated to be around 90 million light-years away and
similar in size to our own large Milky Way galaxy.
In fact,
if they both lie at the same distance their
projected
separation would be only 800,000 light-years or so.
That's easily less than half the distance between the
Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy.
NGC 5078 is interacting with a smaller companion galaxy, cataloged as
IC 879, seen just below and left of the larger galaxy's bright core.
Even more distant background galaxies are scattered
around the colorful field.
Some are even visible right through the face-on disk of NGC 5101.
But the prominent spiky stars are in
the foreground, well within our own Milky Way.
APOD: 2014 January 14 - The Gegenschein Over Chile
Explanation:
Is the night sky darkest in the direction opposite the Sun?
No. In fact, a rarely discernable faint glow known as
the gegenschein (German for "counter glow") can be seen 180
degrees around from the Sun in an extremely dark
sky.
The gegenschein is sunlight back-scattered off small interplanetary
dust particles.
These dust particles are millimeter sized splinters from
asteroids and orbit in the
ecliptic plane of the planets.
Pictured above from last year is one of the more spectacular pictures of
the gegenschein yet taken.
Here a deep exposure of an extremely dark sky over
Las Campanas Observatory in
Chile shows
the gegenschein so clearly that even a surrounding glow is visible.
Notable background
objects include the
Andromeda galaxy,
the Pleiades star cluster,
the California Nebula,
the belt of Orion just below the
Orion Nebula and inside
Barnard's Loop, and
bright stars Rigel and
Betelgeuse.
The gegenschein
is distinguished from zodiacal light near the Sun by the
high angle of reflection.
During the day, a phenomenon similar to
the gegenschein called the glory can
be seen in reflecting air or clouds opposite the Sun from an airplane.
APOD: 2013 October 13 - Hale Bopp: The Great Comet of 1997
Explanation:
Sixteen years ago,
Comet
Hale-Bopp rounded the Sun and offered a dazzling spectacle in planet
Earth's night.
This
stunning view, recorded shortly after the comet's
1997 perihelion passage, features the memorable
tails
of Hale-Bopp -- a whitish dust tail and blue ion tail.
Here, the ion tail extends well over ten degrees across
the northern sky, fading near the double
star clusters
in Perseus, while the head of the comet lies near
Almach,
a bright star in the constellation Andromeda.
Do you remember Hale-Bopp?
The photographer's sons do, pictured in the foreground at
ages 12 and 15.
In all, Hale-Bopp was reported as visible
to the naked eye from roughly late May 1996 through September 1997.
Currently, sky enthusiasts await
Comet ISON's
continued brightening in the coming weeks, unsure how interesting its
first journey to the inner Solar System will be.
APOD: 2013 October 11 - NGC 891 Edge On
Explanation:
This
sharp cosmic portrait features NGC 891.
The
spiral galaxy
spans about 100 thousand light-years and is seen almost exactly edge-on
from our perspective.
In fact, about 30 million light-years distant in the constellation
Andromeda, NGC 891 looks a lot
like our Milky Way.
At first glance, it has a
flat, thin, galactic disk and
a central bulge cut along the middle by
regions of dark obscuring dust.
The combined image data also reveal the galaxy's
young blue star clusters and telltale pinkish star forming regions.
And remarkably apparent in NGC 891's
edge-on presentation are filaments
of dust
that extend hundreds of
light-years above and below the center line.
The dust has likely been blown out of the disk
by supernova explosions or intense
star formation activity.
Faint neighboring galaxies can also be seen near this galaxy's disk.
APOD: 2013 September 27 - Andromeda on the Rocks
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The
Andromeda Galaxy 2.5 million light years away is the most distant
object easily seen by the unaided eye.
Other apparent denizens of the night sky, stars, clusters, and nebulae,
typically range from a few hundred to a few thousand light-years
away and lie well within
our own Milky Way Galaxy.
Also known as M31, the
Andromeda
Galaxy is the faint smudge near top center of this Earth and skyscape,
taken from eastern Italy, near Monte Conero on the Adriatic sea coast.
From a few centimeters
to a few million light-years,
the picture demonstrates a stunning range of vision.
Though galaxy and
seaside rocks could be seen with the eye on that
clear summer night, no camera captured this view in a single exposure.
Because the stars trailed
above the horizon while the picture was made,
separate exposures tracking the stars were combined
with one of rocks and cliffs made with the camera steadied
to create the tantalizing scene.
APOD: 2013 September 26 - M31 versus M33
Explanation:
Separated by about 14 degrees
(28 Full Moons) in planet Earth's sky,
spiral galaxies M31, left, and M33 are both large members of
the Local Group,
along with our own Milky Way galaxy.
This wide-angle,
telescopic mosaic captures colorful details of spiral structure
in both, while the massive neighboring galaxies seem to be balanced
either side of bright Mirach, beta star in the
constellation Andromeda.
But M31, the Andromeda Galaxy,
is really 2.5 million light-years distant and
M33, the Triangulum Galaxy, is also about
3 million light years away.
Mirach, just 200 light-years from the Sun,
lies well within the Milky Way, along with the
dim
clouds of dust drifting through the frame only a few hundred
light-years above the galactic plane.
Although they look far apart,
M31 and M33 are locked in a mutual gravitational embrace.
Radio astronomers have
found indications of
a bridge of neutral hydrogen gas that could connect the two,
evidence of a closer encounter in the past.
Based on measurements, gravitational
simulations currently
predict that the Milky Way, M31, and M33
will all undergo mutual close encounters and potentially
mergers, billions of years
in the future.
APOD: 2013 September 7 - Night in the Andes Ice Forest
Explanation:
This forest of snow and ice
penitentes
reflects moonlight shining across the Chajnantor plateau.
The region lies in the Chilean Andes at an altitude of 5,000 meters,
not far from one of planet Earth's major astronomical observatories, the
Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array.
Up to several meters high, the flattened, sharp-edged shapes,
and orientation of the penitentes
tend to minimize their shadows at local noon.
In the dry, cold, thin atmosphere, sublimation driven
by sunlight is important for
their formation.
A direct transition from a solid to a gaseous state,
sublimation
shapes other solar system terrains too, like
icy
surfaces of comets and the
polar
caps of Mars.
Above the dreamlike landscape stretches the southern night sky.
Their own forms rooted in myth,
look for
the constellations
Pegasus, Andromeda, and Perseus near the panorama's left edge.
Bright and colorful
stars of Orion the Hunter are near center,
with the Large Magellanic Cloud and the
South Celestial Pole
on the far right.
APOD: 2013 August 27 - A Flight through the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
Explanation:
What would it look like to fly through the distant universe?
To find out, a team of astronomers estimated the relative distances
to over 5,000 galaxies in one of the most distant fields of galaxies ever imaged: the
Hubble Ultra Deep Field
(HUDF).
Because it takes light a long time to cross the universe, most galaxies visible in the
above video
are seen when the universe was only a fraction of its current age, were
still forming, and have unusual shapes when compared to modern galaxies.
No mature looking spiral galaxies such as our
Milky Way or the
Andromeda galaxy yet exist.
Toward the end of the video the
virtual observer flies past the farthest galaxies in the
HUDF field, recorded to have a
redshift past 8.
This early class of low luminosity
galaxies
likely contained
energetic stars emitting light that
transformed much of the
remaining normal matter in the universe from a cold gas to a hot ionized
plasma.
APOD: 2013 August 1 - Moon Over Andromeda
Explanation:
The Great Spiral Galaxy
in Andromeda (aka M31), a mere 2.5 million
light-years distant,
is the closest
large spiral to our own Milky Way.
Andromeda is visible to the unaided eye as a small, faint, fuzzy patch,
but because its surface brightness is so low, casual
skygazers
can't appreciate the galaxy's impressive extent in
planet Earth's sky.
This entertaining composite image compares the
angular size
of the nearby galaxy
to a brighter, more familiar celestial sight.
In it, a
deep
exposure of Andromeda, tracing beautiful blue star
clusters in spiral arms far beyond the bright yellow core,
is combined with a typical view of a nearly full Moon.
Shown at the same
angular scale, the Moon covers
about 1/2 degree on the
sky, while the galaxy is clearly several times that size.
The deep Andromeda exposure also includes two bright satellite
galaxies, M32 and
M110 (bottom).
APOD: 2013 June 26 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is frequently referred to as
M31
since it is the 31st object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
above image of M31 was taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including how it acquired
its unusual
double-peaked center.
APOD: 2013 May 14 - Galaxy Collisions: Simulation vs Observations
Explanation:
What happens when two galaxies collide?
Although it may take over a billion years, such
titanic clashes are quite common.
Since galaxies are mostly empty space, no internal stars are likely to themselves
collide.
Rather the gravitation of each galaxy will
distort or destroy the other galaxy,
and the galaxies may eventually
merge
to form a single larger galaxy.
Expansive gas and dust clouds collide and trigger waves of star formation that complete even during the interaction process.
Pictured above is a
computer simulation of two
large spiral galaxies colliding, interspersed
with
real
still
images
taken by the
Hubble Space Telescope.
Our own Milky Way Galaxy
has absorbed several smaller galaxies during its existence and is even
projected to merge with the larger neighboring
Andromeda galaxy in a few billion years.
APOD: 2013 April 3 - Comet PANSTARRS and the Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Currently, comet PANSTARRS is passing nearly in front of the galaxy Andromeda.
Coincidentally, both
comet and galaxy appear now to be just about the same
angular size.
In physical size, even though
Comet PANSTARRS is currently the largest object in the
Solar System with a tail spanning about 15 times the diameter of
the Sun, it is still about 70 billion times
smaller than the
Andromeda galaxy (M31).
The above image
was captured on March 30, near
Syktyvkar,
Russia.
As C/2011 L4 (PANSTARRS) on the lower left
recedes from the Sun and dims, it is
returning to the northerly direction
whence it came.
When
the comet
will return is currently unknown, although
humans may have merged with computers by then.
APOD: 2013 February 2 - Herschel's Andromeda
Explanation:
This infrared view from the
Herschel Space Observatory explores
the Andromeda Galaxy, the closest large spiral galaxy to
our own Milky Way.
Only 2.5 million light-years distant, the
famous island universe is also
known to astronomers as M31.
Andromeda spans
over 200,000 light-years making it more than twice
the size of the Milky Way.
Shown in false color,
the image
data reveal the cool
dust lanes and clouds that still
shine in the
infrared but are
otherwise dark and opaque at visual wavelengths.
Red hues near the galaxy's outskirts represent the glow of
dust heated by starlight to a few tens of degrees above absolute zero.
Blue colors correspond to hotter dust warmed by
stars in the more crowded central core.
Also a tracer
of molecular gas, the dust
highlights Andromeda's prodigious reservoir of raw material for
future star formation.
APOD: 2013 January 23 - Nearby Spiral Galaxy NGC 4945
Explanation:
Large spiral galaxy NGC 4945 is seen
edge-on
near the center of this
cosmic
galaxy portrait.
In fact, NGC 4945 is almost the size of our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Its own dusty disk, young blue star clusters, and pink star forming
regions standout in the sharp, colorful telescopic image.
About 13 million light-years distant toward the
expansive southern
constellation Centaurus,
NGC 4945 is only about six times farther away than Andromeda,
the nearest large spiral galaxy to the Milky Way.
Though the galaxy's central region is largely hidden from
view for optical telescopes, X-ray and infrared observations indicate
significant
high energy emission and star formation in the core
of NGC 4945.
Its obscured but active nucleus qualifies the gorgeous island
universe as a Seyfert galaxy
and likely home to a central supermassive black hole.
APOD: 2013 January 11 - The Fornax Cluster of Galaxies
Explanation:
How do clusters of galaxies form and evolve?
To help find out, astronomers continue to study the second closest cluster of galaxies to Earth: the
Fornax cluster, named for the southern
constellation
toward which most of its galaxies can be found.
Although almost 20 times more distant than our
neighboring Andromeda galaxy,
Fornax is only about 10 percent further that the better known and more populated Virgo cluster of galaxies.
Fornax has a well-defined central region that contains many galaxies,
but is still evolving.
It has other
galaxy groupings that appear distinct
and have yet to merge.
Seen here, almost every
yellowish splotch on the image is an elliptical galaxy in the
Fornax cluster.
The picturesque barred spiral galaxy
NGC 1365 visible on the lower right is also a prominent Fornax cluster member.
APOD: 2012 December 20 - M33: Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum
Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth,
this
sharp composite image, a 25 panel mosaic,
nicely shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions that
trace the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 1 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a
cosmic
yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2012 October 24 - NGC 206 and the Star Clouds of Andromeda
Explanation:
The large stellar association cataloged as
NGC 206 is
nestled within the dusty arms of neighboring
spiral galaxy
Andromeda (M31), 2.5 million light-years distant.
Seen near the center of
this
gorgeous close-up of the southwestern
extent of
Andromeda's disk, the bright, blue
stars of
NGC 206 indicate its youth.
Its youngest massive stars are less than 10 million years old.
Much larger than the clusters of young stars
in the disk
of our Milky Way galaxy known as open or galactic clusters,
NGC 206
spans about 4,000 light-years.
That's comparable in size to the giant stellar nurseries
NGC 604 in nearby spiral
M33 and the
Tarantula Nebula,
in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
APOD: 2012 August 12 - Spiral Galaxy NGC 4038 in Collision
Explanation:
This galaxy is having a bad millennium.
In fact, the past 100 million years haven't been so good,
and probably the next billion or so will be quite tumultuous.
Visible on the upper left, NGC 4038 used to be a normal spiral galaxy, minding its own business, until NGC 4039, toward its right,
crashed into it.
The evolving wreckage, known famously as
the Antennae, is pictured above.
As gravity
restructures each galaxy, clouds of gas slam into each other,
bright blue knots of stars form, massive stars form and
explode,
and brown filaments of dust are strewn about.
Eventually the
two galaxies
will converge into one larger spiral galaxy.
Such collisions are not unusual, and even our own
Milky Way Galaxy
has undergone several in the past and is
predicted to collide
with our neighboring
Andromeda Galaxy in a few billion years.
The
frames that
compose this image
were taken by the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope by professional astronomers to
better understand galaxy collisions.
These frames -- and many other deep space images from
Hubble -- have since been
made public,
allowing an interested amateur to download and
process
them into this visually stunning composite.
APOD: 2012 July 17 - Simulation: A Disk Galaxy Forms
Explanation:
How do galaxies like our Milky Way form?
Since our universe moves too slowly to watch, faster-moving computer simulations are created to help find out.
Green depicts (mostly) hydrogen gas in the
above movie, while time is shown in billions of years since the Big Bang on the lower right.
Pervasive
dark matter
is present but not shown.
As the simulation begins, ambient gas falls into and accumulates in regions of relatively high gravity.
Soon numerous proto-galaxies form, spin, and begin to
merge.
After about four billion years, a well-defined center materializes that dominates a region about 100,000
light-years
across and starts looking like a modern disk
galaxy.
After a few billion more years, however, this early galaxy collides with another, all while
streams of gas from other mergers rain down on this
strange and fascinating cosmic dance.
As the
simulation reaches half the current age of the universe, a single larger disk develops.
Even so, gas blobs -- some representing
small satellite galaxies -- fall into and become absorbed by the rotating galaxy as the present epoch is reached and the movie ends.
For our
Milky Way Galaxy,
however, big mergers may not be over -- recent evidence indicates that our large spiral disk Galaxy
will collide and coalesce with the slightly larger
Andromeda spiral disk galaxy in the next few billion years.
APOD: 2012 June 4 - Milky Way Galaxy Doomed: Collision with Andromeda Pending
Explanation:
Will our Milky Way Galaxy collide one day with its larger neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy?
Most likely, yes.
Careful plotting of slight displacements of M31's stars relative to background galaxies on recent
Hubble Space Telescope images indicate that the center of M31 could be on a direct
collision course with the center of our home galaxy.
Still, the errors in sideways velocity appear sufficiently large to admit a
good chance that the central parts of the two galaxies will miss, slightly, but will become
close enough for their outer halos to become
gravitationally entangled.
Once that happens, the two galaxies will become bound,
dance around, and
eventually merge to
become one large
elliptical galaxy --
over the next few billion years.
Pictured above is an artist's illustration of the sky of a world in the distant future when the central parts of each galaxy begin to destroy each other.
The exact future of our Milky Way and the entire surrounding
Local Group of Galaxies
is likely to remain an active topic of research for years to come.
APOD: 2012 May 26 - At the Edge of NGC 891
Explanation:
This
sharp cosmic portrait features NGC 891.
The spiral galaxy
spans about 100 thousand light-years and is seen almost exactly edge-on
from our perspective.
In fact, about 30 million light-years distant in the constellation
Andromeda, NGC 891 looks a lot
like our Milky Way.
At first glance, it has a
flat, thin, galactic disk and
a central bulge cut along the middle by
regions of dark obscuring dust.
The combined image data also reveal the galaxy's
young blue star clusters and telltale pinkish star forming regions.
And remarkably apparent in NGC 891's
edge-on presentation are filaments
of dust
that extend hundreds of
light-years above and below the center line.
The dust has likely been blown out of the disk
by supernova explosions or intense
star formation activity.
Faint neighboring galaxies can also be seen near this galaxy's disk.
APOD: 2012 May 18 - GALEX: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
A mere 2.5 million light-years away, the Andromeda Galaxy really is
just next door as large galaxies go.
So close, and spanning
some 260,000 light-years, it took 11 different
image fields from the
Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) satellite's
telescope to produce this gorgeous portrait of the spiral galaxy in
ultraviolet light.
While its spiral arms stand out
in visible light images of Andromeda
(also known as M31), the arms look more like rings in
the
GALEX ultraviolet view, dominated by hot, young, massive stars.
As sites of intense star formation, the rings have been interpreted as
evidence Andromeda collided with its smaller neighboring elliptical
galaxy M32 more than 200 million years ago.
The large Andromeda galaxy
and our own Milky Way are the dominant members of the
local
galaxy group.
APOD: 2011 September 22 - Arp 272
Explanation:
Linking spiral arms, two large colliding galaxies are
featured in this remarkable cosmic portrait constructed using
image data from the
Hubble Legacy Archive.
Recorded in astronomer Halton Arp's Atlas of
Peculiar Galaxies as Arp 272, the
pair is otherwise known as
NGC 6050 near center, and IC 1179 at upper right.
A third galaxy, likely also a member of the interacting system,
can be spotted above and left of larger spiral NGC 6050.
They lie some 450 million light-years away in the
Hercules Galaxy Cluster.
At that estimated distance, the picture spans over 150 thousand
light-years.
Although this
scenario
does look peculiar,
galaxy
collisions
and their eventual mergers are now understood to be common,
with Arp 272 representing a stage in this inevitable process.
In fact, the nearby large spiral
Andromeda Galaxy is known
to be approaching our own galaxy and Arp 272 may offer a glimpse of
the far future collision between
Andromeda and
the Milky Way.
APOD: 2011 July 1 - VAR!
Explanation:
In the 1920s, examining photographic plates from the
Mt. Wilson Observatory's
100 inch telescope,
Edwin Hubble determined the distance to the
Andromeda Nebula,
decisively demonstrating the existence of other galaxies far beyond
the Milky Way.
His notations are evident on the historic plate image
inset at the lower right, shown in context with ground based
and Hubble Space Telescope images of the region made
nearly 90 years later.
By comparing different plates, Hubble
searched for novae, stars which underwent a
sudden increase in brightness.
He found several on this plate, indicating their position with
lines and an "N".
Later, discovering that the one near the upper right corner
was actually a type of
variable star known as
a cepheid,
he crossed out the "N" and wrote "VAR!".
Thanks to the work of Harvard
astronomer Henrietta Leavitt, cepheids,
regularly varying pulsating stars, could be used as standard candle
distance indicators.
Identifying such a star allowed Hubble to show
that Andromeda was not a small cluster of stars and gas within our own
galaxy, but a large galaxy in its own right at a substantial
distance from the Milky Way.
Hubble's
discovery is responsible for establishing our modern concept of a
Universe filled with galaxies.
APOD: 2011 May 17 - A Starry Night of Iceland
Explanation:
On some nights, the sky is the best show in town.
On this night, the sky was not only the best show in town, but a composite image of the sky
won an international competition for landscape astrophotography.
The above winning image was taken two months ago over Jökulsárlón, the largest
glacial lake in
Iceland.
The photographer combined six exposures to capture not only two green
auroral rings, but their reflections off the serene lake.
Visible in the distant background sky is the band of our
Milky Way Galaxy,
the
Pleiades
open
clusters
of stars, and the
Andromeda galaxy.
A powerful
coronal mass ejection from the Sun
caused auroras to be seen as far south as
Wisconsin, USA.
As the Sun progresses toward
solar maximum in the next few years,
many more
spectacular
images
of
aurora are expected.
APOD: 2011 April 21 - Peculiar Galaxies of Arp 273
Explanation:
The spiky stars in the foreground of
this
sharp cosmic portrait are well within our own
Milky Way
Galaxy.
The two eye-catching galaxies lie far
beyond the Milky Way,
at a distance of over 300 million light-years.
Their distorted appearance is due to gravitational tides
as the pair engage
in
close encounters.
Cataloged
as
Arp 273 (also as UGC 1810), the galaxies do look
peculiar,
but interacting galaxies are now understood to be
common in the universe.
In fact, the nearby large spiral Andromeda Galaxy is known to be
some 2 million light-years away and approaching the Milky Way.
Arp 273 may offer an analog of their
far future encounter.
Repeated galaxy encounters on a
cosmic timescale can ultimately
result in a merger into a single galaxy of stars.
From our perspective, the bright cores of the Arp 273 galaxies are
separated by only a little over 100,000 light-years.
The release of this
stunning vista celebrates the 21st anniversary of
the Hubble Space Telescope in orbit.
APOD: 2011 February 21 - Milky Way Over Switzerland
Explanation:
What's visible in the night sky during this time of year?
To help illustrate the answer, a beautiful land, cloud, and skyscape was captured earlier this month over
Neuchâtel,
Switzerland.
Visible in the foreground were the snow covered cliffs of the amphitheater shaped
Creux du Van, as well as distant trees, and town-lit clouds.
Visible in the night sky (at midnight) were galaxies including the
long arch of the central band of our
Milky Way Galaxy, the
Andromeda galaxy (M31), and the
Triangulum galaxy
(M33).
Star clusters visible included NGC 752,
M34,
M35,
M41,
the double cluster, and
the Beehive (M44).
Nebulas visible included the Orion Nebula
(M42),
NGC 7822,
IC 1396, the
Rosette Nebula,
the Flaming Star Nebula, the
California Nebula, the
Heart and
Soul Nebulas, and the
Pacman Nebula.
Rolling your cursor over the
above image will bring up labels for
all of these.
But the above
wide angle sky image captured even more sky wonders.
What other nebulas
can you find in the above image?
APOD: 2011 January 20 - The Once and Future Stars of Andromeda
Explanation:
The big, beautiful Andromeda Galaxy,
aka M31, is a spiral galaxy a
mere 2.5 million light-years away.
Two space-based observatories have combined to produce
this intriguing composite image of Andromeda,
at wavelengths outside the
visible spectrum.
The remarkable view
follows the locations of this galaxy's
once and future stars.
In reddish hues, image data from the large
Herschel infrared
observatory traces enormous lanes of dust,
warmed by stars, sweeping along Andromeda's spiral arms.
The dust, in conjunction with the galaxy's interstellar gas,
comprises the raw material for future
star formation.
X-ray data from the XMM-Newton
observatory in blue
pinpoint Andromeda's X-ray binary
star systems.
These systems likely contain neutron stars or stellar mass
black holes that represent final stages in stellar evolution.
More than twice the size of our own Milky Way,
the Andromeda Galaxy is over 200,000 light-years across.
APOD: 2010 December 3 - M33: Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum
Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth,
this sharp, detailed image
nicely shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions that
trace the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the
cavernous
NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 4 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a
cosmic
yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2010 November 16 - Atoms for Peace Galaxy Collision
Explanation:
Is this what will become of our Milky Way Galaxy?
Perhaps if we
collide with the Andromeda Galaxy in a few billion years, it might.
Pictured above is NGC 7252, a jumble of stars created by a
huge collision between two large galaxies.
The collision will take hundreds of millions of years and so is
effectively caught frozen in time in the
above image.
The resulting pandemonium has been dubbed the
Atoms-for-Peace
galaxy because of its similarity to a
cartoon of a large atom.
The above image
was taken recently by the
MPG/ESO 2.2 meter telescope in
Chile.
NGC 7252 spans about 600,000 light years and lies about 220 million
light years
away toward the
constellation of the
Water Bearer (Aquarius).
Since the sideways velocity of the
Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is presently unknown, no one really knows for sure if the Milky Way will ever
collide with M31.
APOD: 2010 October 27 - Ultraviolet Andromeda
Explanation:
This stunning vista represents the highest resolution image
ever made of the
Andromeda Galaxy (aka M31) at ultraviolet
wavelengths.
Recorded by NASA's Swift satellite,
the mosaic is composed of 330 individual images covering
a region 200,000 light-years wide.
It shows about 20,000 sources,
dominated by hot, young stars
and dense star clusters that radiate strongly in
energetic
ultraviolet light.
Of course, the Andromeda
Galaxy
is the closest large spiral galaxy
to our own Milky Way, at a distance of some 2.5 million light-years.
Just slide your cursor over the image to compare the appearance
of this
gorgeous island universe
in optical light with its ultraviolet portrait.
APOD: 2010 August 21 - Perseid Storm
Explanation:
Storms on the distant horizon and comet dust raining through the
heavens above are combined in this alluring
nightscape.
The scene was recorded
in the early hours of August 13 from
the Keota Star Party site on the
Pawnee National Grasslands
of northeastern Colorado, USA.
Looking east across the prairie,
the
composite of 8 consecutive
exposures each 30 seconds long captures the flash of
lightning and a bright Perseid
meteor.
On the right, even the clouds can't block the light from brilliant
planet Jupiter, whose mythological
namesake
knew how to handle both lightning bolts and meteors.
Of course, this meteor's streak points back toward the
shower's radiant
in the heroic constellation Perseus,
sharing a starry background that includes the
Pleiades star
cluster poised above the storm clouds.
Just above the bright meteor lies the faint
Andromeda Galaxy.
APOD: 2010 August 12 - Perseid Prelude
Explanation:
Each August, as planet Earth swings through dust trailing
along the orbit of periodic
comet
Swift-Tuttle,
skygazers can enjoy the Perseid
Meteor Shower.
The shower should
build to its peak now, best seen
from later tonight after moonset, until dawn tomorrow morning when
Earth moves through the denser part of the wide dust trail.
But shower meteors have been spotted for many days, like this
bright Perseid streaking through skies near
Lake Balaton, Hungary on August 8.
In the foreground is the region's Church of St. Andrew ruin,
with bright Jupiter dominating the sky to its right.
Two galaxies lie in the background of the wide-angle, 3
frame panorama; our own
Milky Way's luminous arc, and
the faint smudge of the more distant
Andromeda Galaxy
just above the ruin's leftmost wall.
If you watch
for Perseid meteors tonight,
be sure and check out the early evening sky show too,
featuring bright planets and
a young crescent Moon near the
western horizon after sunset.
APOD: 2010 July 23 - Messier 76
Explanation:
"Nebula at the right foot
of
Andromeda ... " begins the description
for the 76th object in Charles Messier's 18th century Catalog
of
Nebulae and Star Clusters.
In fact, M76 is
one of the fainter objects on the Messier list and
is also known by the popular name of the "Little Dumbbell Nebula".
Like its brighter namesake M27
(the Dumbbell Nebula), M76 is recognized
as a planetary
nebula - a gaseous shroud cast off by a
dying sunlike star.
The nebula itself is thought to be shaped more like a donut, while the
box-like appearance of its brighter central
region is due to our nearly edge-on view.
Gas expanding more rapidly away from the donut hole produces the
fainter loops of far flung material.
The fainter material is emphasized in this composite image, highlighted
by showing emission from hydrogen atoms in orange and oxygen atoms
in complementary blue hues.
The nebula's dying star can be picked out in
the
sharp false-color image as the blue-tinted star near the
center of the box-like shape.
Distance estimates place M76 about 3 to 5 thousand light-years away,
making the nebula over a
light-year in diameter.
APOD: 2010 February 19 - WISE Infrared Andromeda
Explanation:
This
sharp, wide-field view features
infrared light from the spiral
Andromeda Galaxy (M31).
Dust heated by Andromeda's young stars is shown in yellow and red,
while its older population of stars appears as a bluish haze.
The false-color skyscape is a mosaic of images from NASA's new
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
satellite.
With over twice the diameter of
our Milky Way, Andromeda is the largest galaxy in
the
local group.
Andromeda's own satellite galaxies M110
(below) and
M32 (above)
are also included in the combined fields.
Launched in December 2009, WISE began a six month long infrared
survey of the entire sky on January 14.
Expected to discover
near-Earth asteroids
as well as explore
the distant universe, its sensitive infrared detectors are
cooled by frozen hydrogen.
APOD: 2010 January 9 - Andromeda Island Universe
Explanation:
The most distant object easily visible to the eye is
M31,
the great
Andromeda Galaxy
some two and a half million light-years away.
But without a telescope, even this
immense spiral galaxy - spanning over
200,000 light years - appears as a faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
In contrast, details of a bright yellow nucleus and dark winding dust lanes,
are revealed in this
digital telescopic image.
Narrow band image data recording emission from hydrogen atoms, shows off
the reddish star-forming regions dotting
gorgeous blue spiral arms and young star clusters.
While even casual
skygazers
are now inspired by the knowledge that there are
many distant galaxies like M31, astronomers
seriously debated
this fundamental concept in the 20th century.
Were these "spiral nebulae" simply outlying components of our own
Milky Way Galaxy or were they instead "island universes" -- distant
systems of stars comparable to the Milky Way itself?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis
debate
of 1920, which was later resolved by
observations of M31
in favor of Andromeda,
island universe.
APOD: 2009 September 17 - Ultraviolet Andromeda
Explanation:
Taken by a telescope onboard
NASA's Swift satellite,
this stunning vista represents the highest resolution image
ever made of the
Andromeda Galaxy (aka M31) - at ultraviolet
wavelengths.
The mosaic is composed of 330 individual images covering
a region 200,000 light-years wide.
It shows about 20,000 sources,
dominated by hot, young stars
and dense star clusters that radiate strongly in
energetic
ultraviolet light.
Of course, the Andromeda Galaxy
is the closest large spiral galaxy
to our own Milky Way, at a distance of some 2.5 million light-years.
To compare this
gorgeous island universe's appearance
in optical light with its ultraviolet portrait, just slide your cursor over
the image.
APOD: 2009 August 27 - A Dark Sky Over Sequoia National Park
Explanation:
Scroll right to take in the view from the highest summit in the contiguous USA.
The above 360-degree digitally stitched panorama, taken in mid-July, shows the view from 4,400-meter high
Mt. Whitney in
Sequoia National Park,
California.
In the foreground, angular boulders populate Mt. Whitney's summit while in the distance, just below the horizon, peaks from the
Sierra Nevada mountain range are visible.
Sky sights include
light pollution emanating from
Los Angeles and
Fresno, visible just above the horizon.
Dark clouds, particularly evident on the image left well above the horizon, are the remnants of a recent
thunderstorm near
Death Valley.
High above, the
band of the
Milky Way Galaxy arches across the image left.
Bright airglow bands are visible all over the sky but are particularly prominent on the image right.
The planet Jupiter appears as the brightest point on the image left.
A discerning eye can also find a faint image of the far distant
Andromeda galaxy, a
satellite trail, and many constellations.
Today marks the 100th anniversary of the completion of the
historic stone shelter on Mt. Whitney, visible toward the image right.
APOD: 2009 May 10 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is
frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
above image of M31 is a digital mosaic of
20 frames taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including how it acquired
its unusual
double-peaked center.
APOD: 2009 February 12 - Zodiacal Light Vs. Milky Way
Explanation:
Two fundamental planes of planet Earth's sky compete
for attention in this remarkable wide-angle vista,
recorded on January 23rd.
Arcing above the horizon and into the night at the left
is a beautiful band of
Zodiacal Light - sunlight scattered by
dust
in the solar system's ecliptic plane.
Its opponent on the right is composed of the
faint stars, dust clouds, and nebulae along
the plane of our
Milky Way Galaxy.
Both celestial bands stand above the domes and towers of the
Teide Observatory
on the island of Tenerife.
Also out to play in the pristine, dark skies over the Canary Islands,
are brilliant Venus (lower left),
the distant
Andromeda Galaxy (near center),
and the lovely
Pleiades star cluster (top center).
Of course, seasoned skygazers might even spot
M33, the
California Nebula,
IC1805, and the
double star cluster of Perseus.
(Need some help? Just slide your cursor over the picture.)
APOD: 2008 November 15 - Arp 273
Explanation:
The two prominent stars in the foreground of
this
colorful skyscape
are well within our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Their spiky appearance
is due to diffraction in the astronomer's telescope.
But the two eye-catching galaxies in view lie far
beyond the Milky Way,
at a distance of about 200 million light-years.
Their distorted appearance is due to gravitational tides
as the pair engage
in
close encounters.
From our perspective, the bright cores of the galaxies are
separated by about 80,000 light-years.
Cataloged
as
Arp 273 (also as UGC 1810), the galaxies do look
peculiar,
but interacting galaxies are now understood to be
common in the universe.
In fact, the nearby large spiral Andromeda Galaxy is known to be
some 2 million light-years away and approaching the Milky Way.
Arp 273 may offer an analog of their
far future encounter.
Repeated galaxy encounters on a
cosmic timescale can ultimately
result in a merger into a single galaxy of stars.
APOD: 2008 September 13 - M33: Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum
Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth, this
sharp, detailed
image nicely shows off M33's blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions that
trace the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 1 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a
cosmic
yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2008 September 9 - M110: Satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Our Milky Way Galaxy is not alone.
It is part of a gathering of about 25 galaxies known as the
Local Group.
Members include the
Great Andromeda Galaxy (M31),
M32,
M33, the
Large Magellanic Cloud, the
Small Magellanic Cloud,
Dwingeloo 1, several small
irregular galaxies,
and many
dwarf elliptical and
dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
Pictured
on the lower right is one of the
dwarf
ellipticals:
NGC 205.
Like
M32,
NGC 205
is a companion to the large M31,
and can sometimes be seen to the south of
M31's center in photographs.
The image shows
NGC 205 to be unusual
for an elliptical galaxy
in that it contains at least two
dust clouds
(at 9 and 2 o'clock - they are visible but hard to spot)
and signs of recent star formation.
This galaxy is sometimes known as M110,
although it was actually not part of
Messier's original
catalog.
APOD: 2008 July 21 - The Colliding Spiral Galaxies of Arp 271
Explanation:
What will become of these galaxies?
Spiral galaxies
NGC 5426 and NGC 5427 are passing dangerously close to each other,
but each is likely to survive this collision.
Most frequently when
galaxies collide,
a large galaxy eats a much smaller galaxy.
In this case, however, the two galaxies are quite similar, each being a
sprawling spiral with expansive arms and a compact core.
As the galaxies advance over the next tens of millions of years, their component stars are unlikely to collide, although new stars will form in the bunching of gas caused by
gravitational tides.
Close inspection of the
above image taken by the 8-meter
Gemini-South Telescope in
Chile shows a
bridge of material momentarily connecting the two giants.
Known collectively as
Arp 271,
the interacting pair spans about 130,000
light years and lies about 90 million light-years away toward the
constellation of
Virgo.
Quite possibly, our
Milky Way Galaxy will undergo a
similar collision with the neighboring
Andromeda Galaxy in about five billion years.
APOD: 2008 May 7 - The Gegenschein Over Chile
Explanation:
Is the night sky darkest in the direction opposite the Sun?
No. In fact, a rarely discernable faint glow known as
the gegenschein (German for "counter glow") can be seen 180
degrees around from the Sun in an extremely dark sky.
The gegenschein is sunlight back-scattered off small interplanetary
dust particles.
These dust particles are millimeter sized splinters from
asteroids and orbit in the
ecliptic plane of the planets.
Pictured above from last October is one of the most spectacular pictures of
the gegenschein yet taken.
Here a deep exposure of an extremely dark sky over
Paranal Observatory in
Chile shows
the gegenschein so clearly that even a surrounding glow is visible.
In the foreground are several of the
European Southern Observatory's
Very Large Telescopes,
while notable background objects include the
Andromeda galaxy toward the lower left and the
Pleiades star cluster just above the horizon.
The gegenschein
is distinguished from zodiacal light near the Sun by the
high angle of reflection.
During the day, a phenomenon similar to
the gegenschein called the glory can
be seen in reflecting air or clouds opposite the Sun from an airplane.
APOD: 2008 April 30 - Arp 272
Explanation:
Linking spiral arms, two large colliding galaxies are
featured in this Hubble Space Telescope
view, part of a series of cosmic snapshots released
to celebrate
the Hubble's 18th anniversary.
Recorded in astronomer Halton Arp's Atlas of
Peculiar Galaxies as Arp 272, the
pair is otherwise known as
NGC 6050 and IC 1179.
They lie some 450 million light-years away in the
Hercules Galaxy Cluster.
At that estimated distance, the picture spans over 150 thousand
light-years.
Although this
scenario
does look peculiar,
galaxy collisions
and their eventual mergers are now understood to be common,
with Arp 272 representing a stage in this inevitable process.
In fact, the nearby large spiral
Andromeda Galaxy is known
to be approaching our own galaxy and Arp 272 may offer a glimpse of
the far future collision between
Andromeda and
the Milky Way.
APOD: 2008 April 15 - Sky Delights Over Sweden
Explanation:
This night was a
sky enthusiast's delight.
While relaxing in
Sweden
last week, many a cosmic wonder was captured with a single snapshot.
They are described here from near to far.
In the foreground are nearby
trees
and more distant
snow covered mountains.
In silhouette,
Clouds can be seen just above the horizon,
and a careful eye can even discern the more distant green and red
auroras
which occur in Earth's upper atmosphere.
Red emission nebulas dot the sky,
including the
Heart and Soul Nebulas,
IC 1396 and the
North America Nebula.
Running diagonally from the upper left to the lower right is the
majestic glowing band of our
Milky Way Galaxy's central plane..
More distant than everything else, appearing as it did over
two million years ago, is the Andromeda galaxy,
visible above the horizon toward on the lower left.
APOD: 2008 March 28 - Across the Universe
Explanation:
How far can you see?
Even the faintest
stars visible to the eye are
merely hundreds or thousands of light-years distant, all well
within our own Milky Way Galaxy.
Of course, if you know
where to look
you can also spot the
Andromeda Galaxy as a pale, fuzzy cloud,
around 2.5 million light-years away.
But staring toward the northern constellation
Bootes on March 19th, even
without binoculars or telescope you still
could
have witnessed
a faint, brief, flash of light from a
gamma-ray burst.
The source of that burst has been discovered to lie
over halfway across the Universe
at a distance of about 7.5
billion
light-years.
Now holding the distinction of the most distant object that could
be seen by the unaided eye and the intrinsically brightest object
ever detected, the cosmic explosion is estimated to
have been over 2.5 million times more luminous than the brightest
known supernova.
The monster burst was identified and located by the orbiting
Swift
satellite, enabling rapid distance measurements and follow-up
observations by large ground-based telescopes.
The fading afterglow of the gamma-ray burster,
cataloged as GRB080319B, is
shown in these two panels in
X-rays (left) and ultraviolet light (right).
APOD: 2008 January 24 - Andromeda Island Universe
Explanation:
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided
eye is
M31,
the great
Andromeda Galaxy
some two and a half million light-years away.
But without a telescope, even this
immense spiral galaxy - spanning over
200,000 light years - appears as a faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
In contrast, a bright yellow nucleus, dark winding dust lanes,
gorgeous blue spiral arms and star clusters are recorded in this
stunning telescopic
digital mosaic.
While even casual
skygazers
are now inspired by the knowledge that there are
many distant galaxies like M31, astronomers
seriously debated
this fundamental concept less than 90 years ago.
Were these "spiral nebulae" simply outlying components of our own
Milky Way Galaxy or were they instead "island universes" -- distant
systems of stars comparable to the Milky Way itself?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis
debate
of 1920, which was later resolved by
observations of M31
in favor of Andromeda,
island
universe.
APOD: 2007 July 21 - Infrared Andromeda
Explanation:
This wide, detailed
Spitzer Space Telescope view
features infrared light from dust (red) and old stars (blue)
in Andromeda, a massive spiral galaxy
a mere 2.5 million light-years away.
In fact, with over twice the diameter of
our own Milky Way,
Andromeda is
the largest nearby galaxy.
Andromeda's population of bright young stars define its sweeping
spiral arms in
visible light images, but here
the infrared view clearly follows the lumpy dust lanes heated by
the young stars as they wind even closer to the
galaxy's core.
Constructed to explore Andromeda's
infrared brightness
and
stellar populations, the full mosaic image is composed of
about 3,000 individual frames.
Two smaller companion galaxies,
NGC 205 (below) and
M32 (above)
are also included in the combined fields.
The data confirm that Andromeda (aka M31) houses around 1
trillion
stars, compared
to
4 hundred
billion
for the Milky Way.
APOD: 2007 March 31 - Hale-Bopp: The Great Comet of 1997
Explanation:
Ten short years ago,
Comet
Hale-Bopp rounded
the Sun and offered a dazzling spectacle in planet Earth's
night.
This
stunning view, recorded shortly after the comet's
perihelion passage on April 1, 1997, features the memorable
tails
of Hale-Bopp -- a whitish dust tail and blue ion tail.
Here, the ion tail extends well over ten degrees across
the northern sky, fading near the double
star clusters
in Perseus, while the head of the comet lies near
Almach,
a bright star in the constellation Andromeda.
Do you remember Hale-Bopp?
The photographer's sons do, pictured in the foreground at
ages 12 and 15.
In all, Hale-Bopp was reported as visible
to the naked eye from roughly late May 1996 through September 1997.
APOD: 2007 March 19 - Galaxy Group Hickson 44
Explanation:
Galaxies, like stars, frequently form groups.
A group of galaxies is a system containing more than
two galaxies but less than the tens or hundreds typically found in a
cluster of galaxies.
A most notable example is the Local Group of Galaxies, which
houses over 30 galaxies including our
Milky Way,
Andromeda, and the
Magellanic Clouds.
Pictured above is nearby compact group Hickson 44.
This
group is located about 60 million
light-years away toward the constellation of Leo.
Also known as the NGC 3190 Group,
Hickson 44
contains several bright spiral galaxies and one bright
elliptical galaxy on the upper left.
The bright source on the upper right is a foreground star.
Many galaxies in
Hickson 44 and other compact
groups are either slowly merging or
gravitationally pulling
each other apart.
APOD: 2006 December 28 - Moon Over Andromeda
Explanation:
The Great Spiral Galaxy
in Andromeda (aka M31), a mere 2.5 million
light-years distant,
is the closest
large spiral to our own Milky Way.
Andromeda is visible to the unaided eye as a small, faint, fuzzy patch,
but because its surface brightness is so low, casual
skygazers can't
appreciate the galaxy's impressive extent in planet Earth's sky.
This entertaining composite image compares the
angular size
of the nearby galaxy
to a brighter, more familiar celestial sight.
In it, a
deep
exposure of Andromeda, tracing beautiful blue star
clusters in spiral arms far beyond the bright yellow core,
is combined with a typical view of a nearly full Moon.
Shown at the same angular scale, the Moon covers about 1/2 degree on the
sky, while the galaxy is clearly several times that size.
The deep Andromeda exposure also includes two bright satellite
galaxies, M32 and
M110 (bottom).
APOD: 2006 November 26 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is
frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
above image of M31 is a digital mosaic of
20 frames taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including how the center acquired
two nuclei.
APOD: 2006 November 2 - Messier 76
Explanation:
"Nebula at the right foot
of
Andromeda ... " begins the description
for the 76th object in Charles Messier's 18th century Catalog
of
Nebulae and Star Clusters.
In fact, M76 is
one of the fainter objects on the Messier list and
is also known by the popular name of the "Little Dumbbell Nebula".
Like its brighter namesake M27
(the Dumbbell Nebula), M76 is recognized
as a planetary
nebula - a gaseous shroud cast off by a
dying sunlike star.
The nebula itself is thought to be shaped more like a donut, while its
box-like appearance is
due to our nearly edge-on view.
Gas expanding more rapidly away from the donut hole produces the
faint loops of far flung material.
The nebula's dying star can be picked out in
this sharp color image as
the bottom, blue-tinted member of the double star near the center
of the box-like shape.
Distance estimates place M76 about 3 to 5 thousand light-years away,
making the nebula over a
light-year in diameter.
APOD: 2006 September 14 - M33: Spiral Galaxy in Triangulum
Explanation:
The small, northern constellation
Triangulum
harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum
Galaxy.
M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the
Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way,
M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the
Andromeda Galaxy and
astronomers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth, this
detailed,
wide field image nicely shows off M33's blue
star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions which
trace the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the cavernous NGC 604 is the
brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 1 o'clock position
from the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a
cosmic
yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2006 September 8 - Messier 110
Explanation:
This very sharp
telescopic vista features
the last object in the modern version of Charles
Messier's catalog
of bright clusters and nebulae -
Messier 110.
A dwarf elliptical galaxy,
M110 (aka NGC 205) is actually a
bright satellite of the
large spiral galaxy
Andromeda,
making M110 a fellow member
of the local
group of galaxies.
Seen through a foreground of nearby stars,
M110 is about 15,000 light-years across.
That makes it comparable
in size to satellite galaxies of our own Milky Way,
the Large and
Small Magellanic Clouds.
Though elliptical galaxies
are normally thought to be lacking in gas and dust to form new stars,
M110 is known to contain
young stars, and faint dust clouds
can easily be seen in this detailed image at about the
7 and 11 o'clock positions relative to the galaxy center.
APOD: 2006 August 13 - The Comet and the Galaxy
Explanation:
The Moon almost ruined this photograph.
During late March and early April 1997,
Comet Hale-Bopp
passed nearly in front of the
Andromeda Galaxy.
Here the Great Comet
of 1997 and the
Great Galaxy in Andromeda were
photographed together
on 1997 March 24th.
The problem was the brightness of the
Moon. The Moon was full that night and so bright that long
exposures meant to capture the
tails of Hale-Bopp and the disk of
M31 would capture instead
only moonlight reflected off the Earth's atmosphere.
By the time the Moon would set, this opportunity would be gone.
That's why this picture was taken during a total
lunar eclipse.
APOD: 2006 June 9 - Infrared Andromeda
Explanation:
This wide, detailed
Spitzer Space Telescope view
features infrared light from dust (red) and old stars (blue)
in Andromeda, a massive spiral galaxy
a mere 2.5 million light-years away.
In fact, with over twice the diameter of
our own Milky Way,
Andromeda is
the largest nearby galaxy.
Andromeda's population of bright young stars define its sweeping
spiral arms in
visible light images, but here
the infrared view clearly follows the lumpy dust lanes heated by
the young stars as they wind even closer to the
galaxy's core.
Constructed to explore Andromeda's
infrared brightness and
stellar populations, the full mosaic image is composed of
about 3,000 individual frames.
Two smaller companion galaxies,
NGC 205 (below) and
M32 (above)
are also included in the combined fields.
The data confirm that Andromeda (aka M31) houses around 1
trillion
stars, compared
to
4 hundred
billion
for the Milky Way.
APOD: 2005 December 22 - Andromeda Island Universe
Explanation:
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is
M31,
the great
Andromeda Galaxy
some two million light-years away.
But without a telescope, even this immense spiral galaxy - spanning over
200,000 light years - appears as a
faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
In contrast, a bright yellow nucleus, dark winding dust lanes,
gorgeous blue spiral arms and star clusters are recorded in this
stunning
telescopic
digital mosaic with a cumulative exposure of over 90 hours.
While even casual
skygazers
are now inspired by the knowledge that there are
many distant galaxies like M31, astronomers
seriously debated
this fundamental concept only 80 years ago.
Were these "spiral nebulae" simply outlying components of our own
Milky Way Galaxy or were they instead "island universes" -- distant
systems of stars comparable to the Milky Way itself?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis
debate
of 1920, which was later resolved by
observations of M31
in favor of Andromeda,
island
universe.
APOD: 2005 October 20 - The Andromeda Galaxy in Infrared
Explanation:
What is the Andromeda galaxy really like?
To find out, astronomers looked at our
largest galactic neighbor
in a different light: infrared.
Astronomers trained the orbiting
Spitzer Space Telescope at the
Messier monster (M31) for over 18 hours,
creating a mosaic that incorporated 11,000 separate exposures.
The result, pictured above, shows M31 in greater infrared detail than ever before.
Infrared light in this 24-micron color band is particularly sensitive to
dust heated up by stars.
Visible above are
previously undiscovered features including intricate structure in the spiral arms,
a spiral arc near the center, an off center ring of star formation,
and an unusual hole in the galaxy's disk.
In contrast, the Andromeda galaxy appears much
smoother in visible light and even
ultraviolet light.
Analyses and comparison of this image to other images will likely yield
clues not only to the violent past of
M31 but to our own
Milky Way Galaxy as well.
APOD: 2004 December 27 - Andromeda's Core
Explanation:
The center of the Andromeda galaxy is beautiful but strange.
Andromeda,
indexed as M31, is so close to our own
Milky Way Galaxy that it
gives a unique perspective into galaxy composition by
allowing us to see into its core.
Billions of stars swarm around a center that has
two nuclei and likely houses a
supermassive black hole
over 5 million times the mass of our
Sun.
M31 is about two million light years away and
visible with the unaided eye towards the constellation of Andromeda, the princess.
Pictured above, dark
knots of
dust are seen superposed on the inner 10,000
light years of M31's core.
The brighter stars are foreground stars located in our
Milky Way Galaxy.
APOD: 2004 December 14 - Nearby Spiral M33
Explanation:
Spiral galaxy M33 is a mid-sized member of our
Local Group of Galaxies.
M33 is also called the
Triangulum Galaxy for the constellation in which it resides.
About four times smaller (in radius) than our
Milky Way Galaxy
and the Andromeda Galaxy (M31),
it is much larger than the many of the local
dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
M33's proximity to
M31 causes it to be
thought by some to be a satellite galaxy
of this more massive galaxy.
M33's proximity to our
Milky Way Galaxy
causes it to appear more than twice the angular size of the
Full Moon, and be
visible with a good pair of binoculars.
APOD: 2004 July 18 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is
frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
above image of M31 is a digital mosaic of
20 frames taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including how the center acquired
two nuclei.
APOD: 2004 January 31 - A Galaxy is not a Comet
Explanation:
This gorgeous galaxy and
comet portrait was recorded on April 5th, 2002,
in the skies over the Oriental Pyrenees near Figueres,
Spain.
From a site above 1,100 meters,
astrophotographer
Juan Carlos Casado used a guided time exposure, fast film, and
a telephoto lens to capture the predicted conjunction of
the bright Comet Ikeya-Zhang (right)
and the Andromeda Galaxy (left).
This stunning celestial scene would also have been a
rewarding one for the influential 18th century comet
hunter Charles Messier.
While Messier scanned French skies for comets,
he carefully cataloged positions of things which were
fuzzy and comet-like
in appearance but did not move against the background stars and
so were definitely not comets.
The Andromeda Galaxy,
also known as M31, is the 31st object in
his famous
not-a-comet catalog.
Not-a-comet object
number 110, a late addition to Messier's catalog, is
one of Andromeda's small satellite galaxies, and can be
seen here just below M31.
Our modern
understanding
holds that the Andromeda galaxy is a large spiral galaxy
some 2 million light-years
distant.
The photogenic
Comet
Ikeya-Zhang, then a lovely sight in
early morning skies
was about 80 million kilometers (4 light-minutes) from planet Earth.
APOD: 2003 December 22 - The Andromeda Galaxy from GALEX
Explanation:
Why does the Andromeda Galaxy have a giant ring?
Viewed in ultraviolet light, the closest major galaxy to our
Milky Way Galaxy looks more like a
ring galaxy than a
spiral.
The ring is highlighted beautifully in
this newly released image mosaic of
Andromeda (M31) taken by the
GALaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX),
a satellite launched into Earth orbit in April.
In the
above image, ultraviolet colors have been digitally
shifted to the visual.
Young blue stars dominate the image, indicating the
star forming ring as
well as other star forming regions even further from the
galactic center.
The origin of the huge
150,000-light year ring is unknown but likely related to
gravitational interactions with small
satellite galaxies
that orbit near the galactic giant.
M31 lies about three million light-years distant
and is bright enough to be seen without binoculars toward the
constellation of
Andromeda.
APOD: 2003 September 24 - M33: Spiral Galaxy in Triangulum
Explanation:
The small constellation
Triangulum
in the northern sky harbors
this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33.
Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just
the Triangulum Galaxy.
M33's diameter spans over 50,000 light-years, making it third largest in
the Local
Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our
own Milky Way.
About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way, M33
lies very close to the Andromeda Galaxy and
observers
in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of
each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth, this
sharp
27 frame mosaic of M33 nicely shows off blue star clusters
and pinkish star forming regions which trace the galaxy's
loosely wound spiral arms.
In fact, the cavernous NGC 604 is the brightest
star forming region seen here, visible
along an arm arcing above and to the right
of the galaxy center.
Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars
have helped make this nearby spiral a
cosmic
yardstick for
establishing
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: 2003 August 25 - The Northern Milky Way
Explanation:
Many of the stars in our home
Milky Way Galaxy appear together as a dim band
on the sky that passes nearly over the Earth's
north and south poles.
Pictured above is the part of
our Galaxy that passes
closest over the north pole.
Placing your cursor over the image will bring up the names of several constellations and
bright stars.
The diffuse white Galaxy glow is created by billions of stars,
while red patches are large
emission nebulas,
usually marking areas where bright stars have recently formed.
In the north, all of the
lights visible at night and all lights that created
this image were emitted within the past few thousand years
from within the Milky Way Galaxy -- except one.
On the upper right is a small faint patch designated M31, the
Andromeda Galaxy.
M31 is a spiral galaxy similar to our
Milky Way but so distant it emits the oldest light distinguishable by the unaided eye --
light that takes over two million years to reach us.
APOD: 2003 August 2 - Island Universe, Cosmic Sand
Explanation:
On August 13, 2002,
while counting
Perseid meteors under
dark, early morning Arizona skies,
Rick Scott set out to photograph their fleeting
but fiery trails.
The equipment he used included a telephoto lens and fast
color film.
After 21 pictures he'd caught only two meteors, but luckily
this was one of them.
Tracking the sky, his ten minute long exposure shows a
field of many stars in our own Milky Way galaxy, most too
faint to be seen by the unaided eye.
Flashing
from lower left to upper right, the bright meteor would
have been an easy eyeful though,
as friction with Earth's atmosphere
vaporized the hurtling grain of
cosmic sand, a piece of dust from Comet
Swift-Tuttle.
Just above and left of center, well beyond the stars of
the Milky Way, lies the island universe
known as M31 or the Andromeda galaxy.
The visible meteor trail begins about 100 kilometers
above Earth's surface, one of the closest celestial objects
seen in the sky.
In contrast, Andromeda, about 2 million light-years
away, is the most distant object easily visible to the naked-eye.
APOD: 2003 May 19 - The Andromeda Deep Field
Explanation:
What can you learn from looking into the depths of space?
In an effort to find out true ages of stars in neighboring
Andromeda galaxy's
halo, astronomers stared into the
galaxy giant with the new
Advanced Camera for Surveys through the
Hubble Space Telescope.
The resulting exposure of over three days,
shown above, is the deepest exposure in visible light ever taken,
although shorter in duration than the multi-wavelength effort toward the
Hubble Deep Field.
The final image illuminated not only
Andromeda (M31) but the distant universe.
Andromeda's halo stars turned out to be have a
wider range of ages than our
Milky Way's halo stars,
likely indicating more encounters with
small neighboring galaxies.
Visible on the
above left is one of Andromeda's
globular star clusters, while literally
thousands of background galaxies are seen in the
distance universe,
far beyond M31.
APOD: 2002 December 2 - Nearby Spiral M33
Explanation:
Spiral galaxy M33 is a mid-sized member of our
Local Group of Galaxies.
M33 is also called the
Triangulum Galaxy for the
constellation in which it resides.
About four times smaller (in radius) than our
Milky Way Galaxy
and the Andromeda Galaxy (M31),
it is much larger than the many of the local
dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
M33's proximity to
M31 causes it to be
thought by some to be a satellite galaxy
of this more massive galaxy.
M33's proximity to our
Milky Way Galaxy
causes it to appear more than twice the angular size of the
Full Moon, and be
visible with a good pair of binoculars.
The
above high-resolution image from the
0.90-m telescope
at Kitt Peak National Observatory is a four-color composite.
APOD: 2002 October 21 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major
galaxy to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy is thought to look much like
Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the
Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from
Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is
frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes
about two million years for light to reach us from there.
Although visible without aid, the
above image of M31 is a digital mosaic of
20 frames taken with a small telescope.
Much about M31
remains unknown, including how the center acquired
two nuclei.
APOD: 2002 August 23 - Island Universe, Cosmic Sand
Explanation:
On August 13,
while counting Perseid meteors under
dark, early morning Arizona skies,
Rick Scott set out to photograph their fleeting
but fiery trails.
The equipment he used included a telephoto lens and fast
color film.
After 21 pictures he'd caught only two meteors, but luckily
this was one of them.
Tracking the sky, his ten minute long exposure shows a
field of many stars in our own Milky Way galaxy, most too
faint to be seen by the unaided eye.
Flashing
from lower left to upper right, the bright meteor would
have been an easy eyeful though,
as friction with Earth's atmosphere
vaporized the hurtling grain of
cosmic sand, a piece of dust from Comet
Swift-Tuttle.
Just above and left of center, well beyond the stars of
the Milky Way, lies the island universe
known as M31 or the Andromeda galaxy.
The visible meteor trail begins about 100 kilometers
above Earth's surface, one of the closest celestial objects
seen in the sky.
In contrast, Andromeda, about 2 million light-years
away, is the most distant object easily visible to the naked-eye.
APOD: 2002 July 21 - Nearby Spiral Galaxy NGC 4945
Explanation:
For such a close galaxy, NGC 4945 is easy to miss.
NGC 4945 is a
spiral galaxy in the
Centaurus Group of galaxies,
located only six times farther away than the prominent
Andromeda Galaxy. The
thin disk galaxy
is oriented nearly edge-on, however, and shrouded in dark
dust.
Therefore galaxy-gazers searching the
southern constellation of Centaurus need a telescope to see it.
The above picture was taken with a large telescope testing a new wide-angle, high-resolution CCD camera.
Most of the spots scattered about the
frame are
foreground stars in our own
Galaxy, but some spots are
globular clusters
orbiting the distant galaxy.
NGC 4945 is thought to be
quite similar to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
X-ray observations reveal, however,
that NGC 4945 has an unusual, energetic,
Seyfert 2 nucleus
that might house a
large black hole.
APOD: 2002 May 18 - Andromeda Island Universe
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is
M31,
the great
Andromeda Galaxy
some two million light-years away.
Without a telescope, even this immense spiral galaxy appears
as an unremarkable, faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
But a bright yellow nucleus, dark winding dust lanes, gorgeous blue
spiral arms and star clusters are recorded in this stunning
telescopic digital
mosaic of the nearby island universe.
While even casual
skygazers
are now inspired by the knowledge that there are
many distant galaxies like M31, astronomers
seriously debated
this fundamental concept only 80 years ago.
Were these "spiral nebulae" simply outlying components of our own
Milky Way Galaxy or were they instead "island universes" -- distant
systems of stars comparable to the Milky Way itself?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis
debate
of 1920, which was later resolved by
observations of M31
in favor of Andromeda,
island
universe.
APOD: 2002 April 12 - A Galaxy is not a Comet
Explanation:
This gorgeous galaxy and
comet portrait was recorded on April 5th
in the skies over the Oriental Pyrenees near Figueres,
Spain.
From a site above 1,100 meters,
astrophotographer
Juan Carlos Casado used a guided time exposure, fast film, and
a telephoto lens to capture the predicted conjunction of
the bright Comet Ikeya-Zhang (right)
and the Andromeda Galaxy (left).
This stunning celestial scene would also have been a
rewarding one for the influential 18th century comet
hunter Charles Messier.
While Messier scanned French skies for comets,
he carefully cataloged positions of things which were
fuzzy and comet-like
in appearance but did not move against the background stars and
so were definitely not comets.
The Andromeda Galaxy,
also known as M31, is the 31st object in
his famous
not-a-comet catalog.
Not-a-comet object
number 110, a late addition to Messier's catalog, is
one of Andromeda's small satellite galaxies, and can be
seen here just below M31.
Our modern
understanding
holds that the Andromeda galaxy is a large spiral galaxy
some 2 million light-years
distant.
The photogenic
Comet
Ikeya-Zhang, now a lovely sight in
early morning skies,
is about 80 million kilometers (4 light-minutes) from planet Earth.
APOD: 2002 April 4 - Ikeya-Zhang: Comet Over Colorado
Explanation:
Comet
Ikeya-Zhang ("ee-KAY-uh JONG") has become
a most photogenic comet.
This lovely early evening view of
the comet
in Rocky Mountain skies
looks northwest over ridges and low clouds.
The time exposure was recorded on March 31st from
an 8,000 foot elevation near Yampa, Colorado, USA.
Sporting
a sweeping yellowish dust
tail
and blue ion
tail eight to
ten degrees long, Ikeya-Zhang is nestled near the horizon in the
northern constellation of
Andromeda.
To the comet's left is the bright star
Mirach
or Beta Andromedae while the stretched celestial fuzzball to the
comet's right is M31 or the
Andromeda galaxy, the nearest bright
spiral galaxy to our own Milky Way.
As the days pass, Comet Ikeya-Zhang's
apparent motion
through the sky is towards the right in this image.
Tonight,
comet-watchers
blessed with clear skies should find Ikeya-Zhang
posing perfectly
for binoculars and cameras just above M31, less than two degrees
from the center of the bright galaxy.
APOD: 2001 September 27 - Elements of Nearby Spiral M33
Explanation:
Spiral galaxy M33 is a mid-sized member of our
Local Group of Galaxies.
M33 is also called the
Triangulum Galaxy for the
constellation in which it resides.
About four times smaller (in radius) than our
Milky Way Galaxy
and the Andromeda Galaxy (M31),
it is much larger than the many of the local
dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
M33's proximity to
M31 causes it to be
thought by some to be a satellite galaxy
of this more massive galaxy.
M33's proximity to our
Milky Way Galaxy
causes it to appear more than twice the angular size of the
Full Moon, and be
visible with a good pair of binoculars.
The
above high-resolution image highlights light emitted by
hydrogen in red and
oxygen in blue.
It was taken to help separate stars from
emission nebulae,
and therefore help
study how galaxies form stars.
APOD: 2001 September 17 - Southwest Andromeda
Explanation:
This
new image composite of the southwest region of
M31 from the
Subaru Telescope shows many stars,
nebulae, and star clusters never before resolved.
An older population of stars near
Andromeda's center
causes the yellow hue visible on the upper right.
Young blue stars stand out in the
spiral arms on the lower left.
Red emission nebula,
blue open clusters of stars,
and sweeping lanes of dark
dust punctuate the swirling giant.
Andromeda, at about 2.5 million
light years distant, and our
Milky Way are the largest
galaxies in the
Local Group of Galaxies.
Understanding
M31 helps astronomers to
understand our own
Milky Way Galaxy, since the two are so similar.
APOD: 2000 October 23 - Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy NGC 205 in the Local Group
Explanation:
Our Milky Way Galaxy is not alone.
It is part of a gathering of about 25 galaxies known as the
Local Group.
Members include the
Great Andromeda Galaxy (M31),
M32,
M33, the
Large Magellanic Cloud, the
Small Magellanic Cloud,
Dwingeloo 1, several small
irregular galaxies,
and many
dwarf elliptical and
dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
Pictured on the lower left is one of the many
dwarf ellipticals:
NGC 205.
Like
M32,
NGC 205 is a companion to the large M31,
and can sometimes be seen to the south of
M31's center in photographs.
The above image shows
NGC 205 to be unusual for an
elliptical galaxy
in that it contains at least two
dust clouds
(at 1 and 4 o'clock - they are visible but hard to spot)
and signs of recent star formation.
This galaxy is sometimes known as M110,
although it was actually not part of
Messier's original
catalog.
APOD: 2000 September 8 - Andromeda Island Universe
Explanation:
How far can you see?
The most distant object easily visible to the unaided eye is
M31,
the great
Andromeda Galaxy
some two million light-years away.
Without a telescope, even this immense spiral galaxy appears
as an unremarkable, faint, nebulous cloud in the
constellation
Andromeda.
But a bright yellow nucleus, dark winding dustlanes, gorgeous blue
spiral arms and star clusters are recorded in this stunning
telescopic digital
mosaic of the nearby island universe.
While even casual
skygazers
are now inspired by the knowledge that there are
many distant galaxies like M31, astronomers
seriously debated
this fundamental concept only 80 years ago.
Were these "spiral nebulae" simply outlying components of our own
Milky Way Galaxy or were they instead "island universes" -- distant
systems of stars comparable to the Milky Way itself?
This question was central to the famous
Shapley-Curtis
debate
of 1920, which was later resolved by
observations of M31
in favor of Andromeda,
island
universe.
APOD: 2000 March 11 - Messier Marathon
Explanation:
Gripped by an
astronomical spring fever,
it's once again time for
many amateur stargazers to embark on
a Messier Marathon!
The Vernal Equinox
occurs March 20, marking the
first day of Spring for the Northern Hemisphere.
It also marks a favorable
celestial situation for
potentially viewing all the objects in 18th century French astronomer
Charles Messier's catalog
in one
glorious dusk to dawn observing run.
This year a bright full moon will interfere with dark skies near
the actual equinox, so good nights near new moon for weekend
marathoners are March 11/12 and April 1/2.
(As an added bonus all the
planets in the solar system can be viewed
on these dates.)
Astronomer Paul Gitto has created this
masterful Messier Marathon grid with 11 rows
and 10 columns of
Messier catalog objects.
In numerical order, the grid begins with
M1, the Crab Nebula,
at upper left
and ends
with M110, a small elliptical galaxy in Andromeda
(lower right).
Gitto's images were made with a digital camera and a 10-inch diameter
reflecting telescope.
APOD: 2000 January 21 - X For Andromeda
Explanation:
A big beautiful spiral galaxy 2 million light-years away,
Andromeda (M31)
has long been touted as an analog to the Milky Way,
a distant mirror of our own galaxy.
The popular 1960s British sci-fi series,
A For Andromeda,
even postulated that it was home to another technological civilization
that communicated
with us.
Using the newly unleashed observing power of the orbiting
Chandra X-ray telescope,
astronomers have now imaged the
center of our near-twin
island universe, finding evidence
for an object so bizarre it would have impressed many
60s science fiction writers (and readers).
Like the Milky Way,
Andromeda's galactic center appears to
harbor an X-ray source characteristic of
a black hole of a million or more solar masses.
Seen above,
the false-color X-ray picture shows a number of
X-ray sources, likely
X-ray binary stars, within
Andromeda's central region as yellowish dots.
The blue source located right at the galaxy's center is coincident
with the position of the suspected massive black hole.
While
the X-rays are produced as material falls into the
black hole and heats up, estimates from the X-ray data show Andromeda's
central source to be surprisingly cool - only a million
degrees or so compared to the tens of millions of degrees
indicated for Andromeda's X-ray binaries.
APOD: December 18, 1999 - Irregular Galaxy Sextans A
Explanation:
Grand spiral galaxies
often seem to get all the glory.
Their newly formed, bright, blue
star clusters
found along beautiful, symmetric
spiral arms
are guaranteed to attract attention.
But
small irregular galaxies
form stars too,
like this lovely, gumdrop-shaped galaxy,
Sextans A.
A member of
the local group of galaxies which includes the massive
spirals Andromeda and our own
Milky Way,
Sextans A is about
10 million light years distant.
The bright Milky Way foreground stars appear yellowish
in this view. Beyond them lie the stars of
Sextans A with tantalizing
young blue clusters clearly visible.
APOD: November 14, 1999 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major galaxy to our
own Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy is thought to look much like Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the Local Group
of galaxies.
The diffuse light from Andromeda is caused by the hundreds of billions of
stars
that compose it.
The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image are actually stars in
our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object.
Andromeda is frequently referred to as M31 since
it is the 31st object on
Messier's list of diffuse
sky objects.
M31 is so distant it takes about
two million years for light to reach us from there.
Much about
M31 remains unknown,
including why the center contains two nuclei.
APOD: November 3, 1999 - M32: Blue Stars in an Elliptical Galaxy
Explanation:
Elliptical galaxies
are known for their old, red stars. But is this old
elliptical up to new tricks?
In recent years, the centers of
elliptical galaxies
have been found to emit unexpectedly high amounts of blue and
ultraviolet light.
Most blue light from
spiral galaxies originates from
massive young hot stars,
in contrast to the red light from the old cool stars
thought to compose ellipticals.
In the
above recently released, false-color photograph by the
Hubble Space Telescope,
the center of nearby dwarf elliptical M32 has actually been
resolved and does indeed show thousands of bright blue stars.
The
answer is probably that
these blue stars are also old and glow blue, reaching relatively
high temperatures by the
advanced process of
fusing helium, rather than
hydrogen, in their cores.
M32 appears in many pictures
as the companion galaxy to the massive
Andromeda Galaxy (M31).
APOD: April 22, 1999 - Where is Upsilon Andromedae
Explanation:
Astronomers recently announced the detection of
three large planets orbiting
the star Upsilon Andromedae - the first planetary
system known to orbit a normal
star other than our Sun.
These planets were not directly photographed but found through a Doppler
technique developed to use large telescopes to
search nearby stars
for wobbling planetary signatures.
However, Upsilon And itself is visible to the unaided eye
shining in Earth's sky in
the northern constellation Andromeda at about 4th
magnitude.
This deep photographic image shows Upsilon And
along with fainter stars and "deep sky" objects including the famous
Andromeda spiral galaxy
or M31 (right), the
Triangulum galaxy or M33
(below), and the star cluster
NGC 752 (left).
About 44 light-years distant, Upsilon And is a star only a little more
massive and just slightly hotter than the Sun.
APOD: April 16, 1999 - Upsilon Andromedae: An Extra Solar System
Explanation:
Yesterday, astronomers
announced the discovery of the first system
of planets around a normal star other than
our Sun.
Previously, only
single planet star systems had been found.
Subtle changes in the wobble of Upsilon Andromedae, a Sun-like star in the constellation of Andromeda, allowed astronomers led by
R. Paul Butler
(AAO) and
Geoffrey W. Marcy
(SFSU
/UCB)
to make the breakthrough.
This star system is quite different from our own
Solar System, however.
All three detected planets have masses near or above
Jupiter. The
discovery implies that
multiple-planet systems
are quite common, increasing speculation that
life-bearing planets similar to
Earth may one day be found.
The
drawing above is an artist's depiction of the
Upsilon Andromedae system and its innermost planet.
This planet orbits unexpectedly close to its parent star.
APOD: April 12, 1999 - Nearby Spiral Galaxy NGC 4945
Explanation:
For such a close galaxy, NGC 4945 is easy to miss.
NGC 4945 is a
spiral galaxy in the
Centaurus Group of galaxies,
located only six times farther away than the prominent
Andromeda Galaxy. The
thin disk galaxy
is oriented nearly edge-on, however, and shrouded in dark
dust.
Therefore galaxy-gazers searching the
southern constellation of Centaurus need a telescope to see it.
The above picture was taken with a large telescope testing a new wide-angle, high-resolution CCD camera.
Most of the spots scattered about the frame are
foreground stars in our own Galaxy, but some spots are
globular clusters
orbiting the distant galaxy.
NGC 4945 is thought to be
quite similar to our own
Milky Way Galaxy.
X-ray observations reveal, however,
that NGC 4945 has an unusual, energetic,
Seyfert 2 nucleus
that might house a
large black hole.
APOD: April 2, 1999 - Stars of NGC 206
Explanation:
Nestled within the dusty arms of the large
spiral galaxy Andromeda (M31),
the star cluster
NGC 206 is one of the largest
star forming regions known in our local group of galaxies.
The beautiful bright blue stars
of NGC 206 betray its youth -
but close, systematic studies of variable
stars in and
around NGC 206 will also accurately reveal its distance.
Astronomers
are searching for variable stars in NGC 206,
particularly pulsating stars known as
Cepheids and
eclipsing binary star systems.
Distances for these types of stars can be effectively determined by
following the
periodic changes in their brightness and spectra.
About 3 million light-years away,
an accurately known distance to NGC 206 and
thus M31 is
critical to the larger understanding of galaxy formation, galaxy evolution,
and ultimately
the distance scale of the Universe.
APOD: March 18, 1999 - Messier Marathon
Explanation:
Gripped by an
astronomical spring fever, this week
many amateur stargazers embark on
a Messier Marathon.
The Vernal Equinox
occurs Saturday, March 20, marking the
first day of Spring for the Northern Hemisphere.
It also marks a favorable celestial situation for
potentially viewing all the objects in 18th century French astronomer
Charles Messier's catalog
in one
glorious dusk to dawn observing run.
This year, interference from bright moonlight will be minimal as
the the moon is near its dark or new phase.
Astronomer Paul Gitto has created this
masterful Messier Marathon grid with 11 rows
and 10 columns of
Messier catalog objects.
In numerical order, the grid begins with
M1, the Crab Nebula,
at upper left and ends
with M110, a small elliptical galaxy in Andromeda
(lower right).
Gitto's images were made with a digital camera and a 10-inch diameter
reflecting telescope.
APOD: March 14, 1999 - The Comet and the Galaxy
Explanation:
The Moon almost ruined this photograph.
During late March and early April 1997,
Comet Hale-Bopp
passed nearly in front of the
Andromeda Galaxy.
Here the Great Comet of 1997 and the
Great Galaxy in Andromeda were
photographed together
on 1997 March 24th.
The problem was the brightness of the
Moon. The Moon was full that night and so bright that long
exposures meant to capture the
tails of Hale-Bopp and the disk of
M31 would capture instead
only moonlight reflected off the Earth's atmosphere.
By the time the Moon would set, this opportunity would be gone.
That's why this picture was taken during a
lunar eclipse.
APOD: February 17, 1999 - Hickson Compact Group 40
Explanation:
Galaxies, like stars, frequently form groups.
A group of galaxies is a system containing more than
two galaxies but less than the
tens or hundreds typically found in a
cluster of galaxies.
A most notable example is the Local Group of Galaxies, which
houses over 30 galaxies including our
Milky Way,
Andromeda, and the
Magellanic Clouds.
Pictured above is nearby compact group Hickson 40.
This
group is located about 300 million
light-years away toward the constellation of Hydra.
Of the five prominent galaxies in Hickson 40, three are
spirals,
one is an elliptical and one is a
lenticular.
Many galaxies in compact groups are either
slowly merging or
gravitationally pulling
each other apart.
APOD: January 22, 1999 - Pegasus dSph: Little Galaxy of the Local Group
Explanation:
The Pegasus dwarf spheroidal galaxy
(Peg dSph) is a
small, newly recognized member of
the Local Group of Galaxies.
Likely a satellite companion of the
Local Group's dominant player, the large spiral
Andromeda (M31),
the Pegasus dwarf galaxy is
almost hidden in the glare
of relatively bright foreground stars
in our own Milkyway.
Still, this
dramatic Keck telescope 3-color image reveals Peg dSph
as a clump of fainter, bluer stars 2,000 or so light-years across.
Excitement over
discoveries of
Peg dSph and other
nearby dwarf galaxies
reflects the fact that
little galaxies may loom large in the
process of galaxy evolution.
They are thought to be the
building blocks from which
larger galaxies are constructed.
APOD: November 25, 1997 - The Comet and the Galaxy
Explanation:
The Moon almost ruined this photograph.
During late March and early April,
Comet Hale-Bopp
passed nearly in front of the
Andromeda Galaxy.
Here the Great Comet of 1997 and the
Great Galaxy in Andromeda were
photographed together
on March 24th.
The problem was the brightness of the
Moon. The Moon was full that night and so bright that long
exposures meant to capture the
tails of Hale-Bopp and the disk of
M31 would capture instead
only moonlight reflected off the Earth's atmosphere.
By the time the Moon would set, this opportunity would be gone.
That's why this picture was taken during the
lunar eclipse.
APOD: November 14, 1997 - Irregular Galaxy Sextans A
Explanation:
Grand spiral
galaxies often seem to get all the glory.
Their newly formed, bright, blue
star clusters
found along beautiful, symmetric
spiral arms
are guaranteed to attract attention.
But small
irregular galaxies form stars too,
like this lovely, gumdrop-shaped galaxy,
Sextans A.
A member of
the local group of galaxies which includes the massive
spirals Andromeda and our own
Milky Way,
Sextans A is about
10 million light years distant.
The bright Milky Way foreground stars appear yellowish
in this view. Beyond them lie the stars of
Sextans A with tantalizing
young blue clusters clearly visible.
APOD: November 1, 1997 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major galaxy to our
own Milky Way Galaxy. Our Galaxy
is thought to look much like Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the Local Group
of galaxies. The diffuse light from Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of stars
that compose it. The several distinct stars that surround Andromeda's
image are actually stars in our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object. Andromeda
is frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse
sky objects. M31
is so distant it takes about 2 million years for light to reach
us from there. Much about M31 remains unknown,
including why the center contains two nuclei.
APOD: April 1, 1997 - Hale-Bopp and Andromeda
Explanation: Which is closer: the comet or the galaxy?
Answer: the comet. In its trek through the inner Solar System,
Comet Hale-Bopp has passed nearly in front of the Andromeda Galaxy
(M31), seen on the lower left. At the time of this picture, March
27th, Comet Hale-Bopp
was about 10 light-minutes from the Earth,
while M31 remained about 3 million light-years distant.
By contrast, light can cross the Earth in about 1/20th
of a second, and light takes about one second to reach Earth's Moon.
Comet Hale-Bopp is one of the largest comets
ever recorded, and although its' nucleus has never been photographed,
it is estimated from brightness and spin measurements to be about
40 kilometers across. In contrast, Comet Halley
in 1987 was measured to be 15 km, and Comet Hyakutake
in 1996 was estimated to be no more than 10 km.
APOD: February 20, 1997 - Comet Hale-Bopp and the Dumbbell Nebula
Explanation: Comet Hale-Bopp is now slowly moving across the morning sky.
During its trip to our inner Solar System,
the comet passes in front of several notable objects. Here Comet Hale-Bopp
was photographed on February 11th
superposed nearly in front of the picturesque Dumbbell Nebula,
visible on the upper right. Comet Hale-Bopp is now first magnitude
- one of the brightest objects in the morning sky. APOD,
always in search of interesting and accurate astronomy pictures,
issues the following informal challenge: that Comet Hale-Bopp
be photographed in color with both easily recognizable foreground
and background objects. For instance, in late March, it might
be possible to photograph the comet with the Eiffel Tower
in the foreground and the Andromeda galaxy
(M31) in the background. Such superpositions would not only contrast
human and cosmic elements, but give angular perspective on the
size of the comet's tail.
APOD: October 9, 1996 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation: Andromeda is the nearest major galaxy to our
own Milky Way Galaxy. Our Galaxy
is thought to look much like Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the Local Group
of galaxies. The diffuse light from Andromeda
is caused by the hundreds of billions of stars
that compose it. The several distinct stars that surround Andromeda's
image are actually stars in our Galaxy
that are well in front of the background object. Andromeda
is frequently referred to as M31 since it is the 31st
object on
Messier's list of diffuse
sky objects. M31
is so distant it takes about 2 million years for light to reach
us from there. Much about M31 remains unknown,
including why the center contains two nuclei.
APOD: July 8, 1996 - M33: The Triangulum Galaxy
Explanation:
The spiral galaxy
M33
is a mid-sized member of our
Local Group of galaxies.
M33 is also called the Triangulum Galaxy for the constellation in which it resides.
About four times smaller (in radius) than our
Milky Way Galaxy and the
Andromeda Galaxy
(M31), it is much larger than the many of the
local dwarf spheroidal
galaxies. M33's proximity to M31 causes it to be thought by some to be a
satellite galaxy of this more massive galaxy. M33's proximity to our Milky
Way galaxy causes it to appear more than twice the angular size of the
full moon, and visible with a
good pair of
binoculars.
In the
above picture, visible light is shown in red and
ultraviolet light
superposed in blue.
Stars in M33 are the most distant ever to be studied
spectroscopically.
APOD: April 6, 1996 - Andromeda Nebula: Var!
Explanation:
In the 1920s, using photographic plates made with the
Mt. Wilson Observatory's 100 inch
telescope, Edwin Hubble
determined the distance to the Andromeda Nebula -
decisively demonstrating the existence of
other galaxies far beyond the Milky Way.
His notations are evident on
the plate shown above
(the image is a negative with stars appearing as black dots against
the white background of space).
By intercomparing plates, Hubble
searched for "novae", stars which underwent a
sudden increase in brightness.
He found several on this plate and marked them with an "N".
Later he discovered that one was actually a type of
variable star known as a cepheid -
crossing out the "N" he wrote "Var!" (upper right).
Thanks to the work of Harvard
astronomer Henrietta Leavitt, cepheids,
regularly varying, pulsating stars, could be used as
"standard candle" distance indicators.
Identifying such a star allowed Hubble to show
that Andromeda was not a small cluster of stars and gas within our own
galaxy, but a large galaxy in its own right at a substantial
distance from the Milky Way.
Hubble's discovery is responsible for our modern concept of a
Universe filled with galaxies.
APOD: January 8, 1996 - Local Group Galaxy NGC 205
Explanation:
The
Milky Way Galaxy is not alone. It is part of a
gathering of about 25 galaxies known as the
Local Group.
Members include the
Great Andromeda Galaxy (M31),
M32,
M33, the
Large Magellanic Clouds, the
Small Magellanic Clouds,
Dwingeloo 1, several small
irregular galaxies, and many
dwarf elliptical
galaxies. Pictured is one of the many dwarf ellipticals: NGC 205. Like
M32, NGC 205 is a companion to the large M31, and can sometimes be seen to
the south of
M31's center in
photographs. The
above image
shows this galaxy to be unusual for an
elliptical galaxy
in that it contains at least two
dust clouds (at 7 and 11
o'clock - they are visible but hard to spot) and signs of recent star
formation. This galaxy is sometimes known as M110, although it was
actually not part of
Messier's original catalog.
APOD: July 24, 1995 - M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
Explanation:
Andromeda is the nearest major galaxy to our own Milky Way
Galaxy. Our Galaxy is thought to look much like Andromeda.
Together these two galaxies dominate the Local Group of galaxies.
The diffuse light from Andromeda is caused by the hundreds of billions
of stars that compose it. The several distinct stars that surround
Andromeda's image
are actually stars in our Galaxy that are well in front of the background
object.
Andromeda is frequently referred to as M31 since it is
the 31st object on
Messier's
list of diffuse sky objects. M31 is so distant it takes about 2 million
years for light to reach us from there.