- Andromeda Galaxy - Wikipedia
The Andromeda Galaxy is a barred spiral galaxy and is the nearest major galaxy to the Milky Way It was originally named the Andromeda Nebula and is cataloged as Messier 31, M31, and NGC 224
- Andromeda Galaxy | Description, Location, Distance, Facts - Britannica
Andromeda Galaxy, great spiral galaxy in the constellation Andromeda, the nearest large galaxy It is one of the few visible to the unaided eye, appearing as a milky blur The Andromeda Galaxy is located about 2,480,000 light-years from Earth, and its diameter is approximately 200,000 light-years
- Messier 31 (The Andromeda Galaxy) - NASA Science
Messier 31 M31, also well-known as the Andromeda Galaxy, is the nearest major galaxy to our own, the Milky Way
- The Andromeda galaxy: All you need to know - EarthSky
Excluding the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, visible from Earth’s Southern Hemisphere, the Andromeda galaxy is the brightest external galaxy visible in our night sky And, at 2 5 million
- Why The Andromeda Galaxy Is 100 Years Old Today—And How To See It
Andromeda, also called M31, is the closest giant neighboring galaxy at just 2 5 million light years away and home to at least a trillion stars It wasn't always that way
- The Andromeda galaxy quenches its satellite galaxies long before they . . .
The resplendent Andromeda Galaxy (M31) as imaged by NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer The yellowish galaxy below it is its satellite, M110, and the blue galaxy above it is M32 Andromeda has 39
- Andromeda Galaxy: Complete guide and how to see it
The Andromeda Galaxy is the closest major galaxy to our home galaxy the Milky Way and is located over 2 million lightyears from Earth It is a spiral galaxy found in the Andromeda constellation and is about 200,000 lightyears wide It is also known as M31, part of the deep-sky Messier Catalogue
- Andromeda Galaxy: Facts about our closest galactic neighbor
The Andromeda galaxy is the most distant object in the sky that you can see with your unaided eye It's also on a collision course with our Milky Way
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