Messier 100
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Messier 100
Messier 100 (also known as NGC 4321 or the Mirror Galaxy) is a grand design spiral galaxy, grand design intermediate spiral galaxy in the southern part of the mildly celestial hemisphere, northern Coma Berenices. It is one of the brightest and largest galaxies in the Virgo Cluster and is approximately 55 million light-years from Milky Way, our galaxy, about 166,000 light-years in diameter. It was discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781 and 29 days later seen again and entered by Charles Messier in Messier object, his catalogue "of nebulae and star clusters". It was one of the first spiral galaxies to be discovered, and was listed as one of fourteen Spiral galaxy, spiral nebulae by William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, Lord William Parsons of Rosse in 1850. NGC 4323 and NGC 4328 are satellite galaxy, satellite galaxies of M100; the former is connected with it by a bridge of luminous matter. Early observations After the discovery of M100 by Méchain, Charles Messier made observation ...
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Messier Object
The Messier objects are a set of 110 astronomical objects catalogued by the French astronomer Charles Messier in his ' (''Catalogue of Nebulae and Star Clusters''). Because Messier was interested only in finding comets, he created a list of those non-comet objects that frustrated his hunt for them. This list, which Messier created in collaboration with his assistant Pierre Méchain, is now known as the ''Messier catalogue''. The Messier catalogue is one of the most famous lists of astronomical objects, and many objects on the list are still referenced by their Messier numbers. The catalogue includes most of the astronomical deep-sky objects that can be easily observed from Earth's Northern Hemisphere; many Messier objects are popular targets for amateur astronomers. A preliminary version of the catalogue first appeared in 1774 in the ''Memoirs'' of the French Academy of Sciences for the year 1771. The first version of Messier's catalogue contained 45 objects, which ...
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Spiral Galaxy
Spiral galaxies form a galaxy morphological classification, class of galaxy originally described by Edwin Hubble in his 1936 work ''The Realm of the Nebulae''Alt URL
pp. 124–151)
and, as such, form part of the Hubble sequence. Most spiral galaxies consist of a flat, rotating Disc (galaxy), disk containing stars, Interstellar medium, gas and dust, and a central concentration of stars known as the Bulge (astronomy), bulge. These are often surrounded by a much fainter Galactic halo, halo of stars, many of which reside in globular clusters. Spiral galaxies are named by their spiral structures that extend from the center into the galactic disc. The spiral arms are sites of ongoing star formation and are brighter than the surrounding disc because of the young, hot OB stars that inhabit them. Roughly two-thirds of all spirals are ...
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Star Formation
Star formation is the process by which dense regions within molecular clouds in interstellar space—sometimes referred to as "stellar nurseries" or "star-forming regions"—Jeans instability, collapse and form stars. As a branch of astronomy, star formation includes the study of the interstellar medium (ISM) and giant molecular clouds (GMC) as precursors to the star formation process, and the study of protostars and young stellar objects as its immediate products. It is closely related to planet formation, another branch of astronomy. Star formation theory, as well as accounting for the formation of a single star, must also account for the statistics of binary stars and the initial mass function. Most stars do not form in isolation but as part of a group of stars referred as star clusters or stellar associations. First stars Star formation is divided into three groups called "Populations". Population III stars formed from primordial hydrogen after the Big Bang. These stars are ...
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