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  2. Elliptical galaxy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliptical_galaxy

    The giant elliptical galaxy ESO 325-4. An elliptical galaxy is a type of galaxy with an approximately ellipsoidal shape and a smooth, nearly featureless image. They are one of the three main classes of galaxy described by Edwin Hubble in his Hubble sequence and 1936 work The Realm of the Nebulae, [1] along with spiral and lenticular galaxies.

  3. Galaxy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galaxy

    If one of the galaxies is much more massive than the other, the result is known as cannibalism, where the more massive larger galaxy remains relatively undisturbed, and the smaller one is torn apart. The Milky Way galaxy is currently in the process of cannibalizing the Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy and the Canis Major Dwarf Galaxy .

  4. Great Attractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Attractor

    In 1992, much of the apparent signal of the Great Attractor was attributed to a statistical effect called Malmquist bias. [9] In 2005, astronomers conducting an X-ray survey of part of the sky known as the Clusters in the Zone of Avoidance (CIZA) project reported that the Great Attractor was actually only one tenth the mass that scientists had ...

  5. Galaxy formation and evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galaxy_formation_and_evolution

    One theorized preventive mechanism called “strangulation” keeps cold gas from entering the galaxy. Strangulation is likely the main mechanism for quenching star formation in nearby low-mass galaxies. [20] The exact physical explanation for strangulation is still unknown, but it may have to do with a galaxy's interactions with other galaxies.

  6. Galactic orientation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galactic_orientation

    The Milky Way Galaxy [4] is only one of the billions of galaxies in the known universe. Galaxies are classified into spirals, [5] ellipticals, irregular, and peculiar. Sizes can range from only a few thousand stars (dwarf irregulars) to 10 13 stars in giant ellipticals. Elliptical galaxies are spherical or elliptical in appearance.

  7. S2 (star) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S2_(star)

    S2, also known as S0–2, is a star in the star cluster close to the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), orbiting it with a period of 16.0518 years, a semi-major axis of about 970 au, and a pericenter distance of 17 light hours (18 Tm or 120 au) – an orbit with a period only about 30% longer than that of Jupiter around the Sun, but coming no closer than about four times the ...

  8. Glossary of astronomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_astronomy

    A-type star In the Harvard spectral classification system, a class of main-sequence star having spectra dominated by Balmer absorption lines of hydrogen. Stars of spectral class A are typically blue-white or white in color, measure between 1.4 and 2.1 times the mass of the Sun, and have surface temperatures of 7,600–10,000 kelvin.

  9. Astronomical object - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_object

    Each star follows an evolutionary track across this diagram. If this track takes the star through a region containing an intrinsic variable type, then its physical properties can cause it to become a variable star. An example of this is the instability strip, a region of the H-R diagram that includes Delta Scuti, RR Lyrae and Cepheid variables. [7]

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