NASA shares video of the Andromeda galaxy

NASA

NASA

NASA shares video of the Andromeda galaxy

NASA has shared a magnificent video of the Andromeda galaxy with its viewers. The aim is to give them a virtual tour. The Andromeda Galaxy is the largest galaxy in the “Local Group,”. It is a cluster of galaxies that includes our Milky Way.

“Hey, neighbour!,” NASA wrote in the caption. Millions of stars are in this Hubble image of a part of Andromeda. In the video, a rich combination of old red stars and youthful blue stars can be seen blazing. The video has received over 100,000 views since it was shared.

“The nearby Andromeda Galaxy is the largest galaxy in the “Local Group” – a group of galaxies that our Milky Way additionally belongs to. This Hubble view of a portion of Andromeda reveals tens of millions of stars. A wealthy mixture of previous crimson stars and younger blue stars shine, together with occasional background galaxies and filaments of mud,” Nasa wrote while sharing the video. “We are so small,” writes an Instagram consumer. “Magnificent,” expresses one other. “Incomprehensible,” posts another one.

The Andromeda galaxy, commonly known as M31. It is a magnificent spiral with up to a trillion stars that is comparable in size to our own Milky Way. It appears as a cigar-shaped smudge of light high in the autumn sky at a distance of 2.5 million light-years. Last year, NASA shared a picture of an immense envelope of gas, called a halo.

This envelope of gas was captured by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. This halo surrounds the Andromeda galaxy. This practically undetectable halo of diffuse plasma spreads from the galaxy for 1.3 million light-years. Because of its close proximity to Earth, Andromeda’s gaseous halo appears huge in the sky. This enables far more extensive sampling. 

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