📍 Andromeda Galaxy
➡️ 2.5 million light-years
🏠 Andromeda constellation

We’ve reached our final #meetyourcosmicneighbors destination: the Andromeda Galaxy! With almost the same mass as our home galaxy, Andromeda is headed for a collision with the Milky Way in 2-4 billion years. For now, we can admire its beauty from afar.

As a spiral galaxy, Andromeda’s winding arms are one of its most remarkable features. Hubble zoomed in to get a close look at its rosy tendrils, revealing swathes of ionized gas. These regions — which are common in spiral and irregular galaxies — often indicate the presence of recent star formation.

To investigate the spiral galaxy’s stellar properties, Hubble’s instruments peered through hedges of gas and observed a valuable sample of stars.

This concludes our intergalactic journey for Meet Your Cosmic Neighbors! We hope you enjoyed this series, and that you look forward to more Hubble science.

Image credits: NASA, ESA, M. Boyer (Space Telescope Science Institute), and J. Dalcanton (University of Washington); Image Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)

#nasa #hubble #andromeda #galaxy #space #science #stars #astronomy #universe

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Hey, neighbor!

The Andromeda Galaxy is the nearest major galaxy to ours, at a distance of about 2.5 million light-years.

This #hubbleclassic view shows just a portion of Andromeda. Hubble surveyed 2,753 star clusters in this galaxy and found there’s a consistent distribution from massive stars to small stars, and this ratio is the same in our own stellar neighborhood here in the Milky Way!

Image credit: NASA, ESA, J. Dalcanton, B.F. Williams, L.C. Johnson (University of Washington), and the PHAT team

#nasa #hubble #classic #andromeda #galaxy #space #stars #science #astronomy

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