Andromeda Galaxy | |
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The Andromeda Galaxy with satellite galaxies M32 (center left above the galactic nucleus) and M110 (center left below the galaxy)
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Observation data (J2000 epoch) | |
Pronunciation | /ænˈdrɒmɪdə/ |
Constellation | Andromeda |
Right ascension | 00h 42m 44.3s |
Declination | +41° 16′ 9″ |
Redshift | z = −0.001001 (minus sign indicates blueshift) |
Helio radial velocity | −301 ± 1 km/s |
Distance | 2.54 ± 0.11 Mly (778 ± 33 kpc) |
Apparent magnitude (V) | 3.44 |
Absolute magnitude (V) | −21.5 |
Characteristics | |
Type | SA(s)b |
Mass | ~0.8-1.5×1012 M☉ |
Number of stars | ~1 trillion (1012) |
Size | ~220 kly (diameter) |
Apparent size (V) | 3.167° × 1° |
Other designations | |
M31, NGC 224, UGC 454, PGC 2557, 2C 56 (Core), CGCG 535-17, MCG +07-02-016, IRAS 00400+4059, 2MASX J00424433+4116074, GC 116, h 50, Bode 3, Flamsteed 58, Hevelius 32, Ha 3.3, IRC +40013 |
The Andromeda Galaxy, also known as Messier 31, M31, or NGC 224, is a spiral galaxy approximately 780 kiloparsecs (2.5 million light-years) from Earth, and the nearest major galaxy to the Milky Way. Its name stems from the area of the Earth's sky in which it appears, the constellation of Andromeda.
The 2006 observations by the Spitzer Space Telescope revealed that the Andromeda Galaxy contains approximately one trillion stars, more than twice the number of the Milky Way's estimated 200 to 400 billion stars. The Andromeda Galaxy's mass is estimated to be around 1.76 times that of the Milky Way Galaxy (~0.8-1.5×1012 solar masses vs the Milky Way's 8.5×1011 solar masses), though a 2018 study found that the Andromeda Galaxy's mass is roughly the same as the Milky Way's. The Andromeda Galaxy, spanning approximately 220,000 light-years, is the largest galaxy in the Local Group, which is also home to the Triangulum Galaxy and other minor galaxies.
The Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies are expected to collide in ~4.5 billion years, merging to form a giant elliptical galaxy or a large disc galaxy. With an apparent magnitude of 3.4, the Andromeda Galaxy is among the brightest of the Messier objects making it visible to the naked eye from Earth on moonless nights, even when viewed from areas with moderate light pollution.
Observation history
Around the year 964, the Persian astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi described the Andromeda Galaxy, in his Book of Fixed Stars as a "nebulous smear".
Star charts of that period labeled it as the Little Cloud. In 1612, the German astronomer Simon Marius gave an early description of the Andromeda Galaxy based on telescopic observations. The German philosopher Immanuel Kant in 1755 in his work Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens conjectured that the blurry spot was an island universe. In 1764, Charles Messier
cataloged Andromeda as object M31 and incorrectly credited Marius as
the discoverer despite it being visible to the naked eye. In 1785, the
astronomer William Herschel noted a faint reddish hue in the core region of Andromeda. He believed Andromeda to be the nearest of all the "great nebulae",
and based on the color and magnitude of the nebula, he incorrectly
guessed that it is no more than 2,000 times the distance of Sirius. In 1850, William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, saw and made the first drawing of Andromeda's spiral structure.
In 1864, William Huggins noted that the spectrum of Andromeda differs from a gaseous nebula. The spectra of Andromeda displays a continuum of frequencies, superimposed with dark absorption lines
that help identify the chemical composition of an object. Andromeda's
spectrum is very similar to the spectra of individual stars, and from
this, it was deduced that Andromeda has a stellar nature. In 1885, a supernova (known as S Andromedae)
was seen in Andromeda, the first and so far only one observed in that
galaxy. At the time Andromeda was considered to be a nearby object, so
the cause was thought to be a much less luminous and unrelated event
called a nova, and was named accordingly; "Nova 1885".
In 1887, Isaac Roberts
took the first photographs of Andromeda, which was still commonly
thought to be a nebula within our galaxy. Roberts mistook Andromeda and
similar spiral nebulae as solar systems being formed. In 1912, Vesto Slipher used spectroscopy to measure the radial velocity of Andromeda with respect to our Solar System—the largest velocity yet measured, at 300 kilometres per second (190 miles per second).
Island universe
In 1917, Heber Curtis observed a nova
within Andromeda. Searching the photographic record, 11 more novae were
discovered. Curtis noticed that these novae were, on average, 10 magnitudes
fainter than those that occurred elsewhere in the sky. As a result, he
was able to come up with a distance estimate of 500,000 light-years (3.2×1010 AU). He became a proponent of the so-called "island universes" hypothesis, which held that spiral nebulae were actually independent galaxies.
In 1920, the Great Debate between Harlow Shapley and Curtis took place concerning the nature of the Milky Way, spiral nebulae, and the dimensions of the Universe.
To support his claim of the Great Andromeda Nebula being, in fact, an
external galaxy, Curtis also noted the appearance of dark lanes within
Andromeda which resembled the dust clouds in our own galaxy, as well as
historical observations of Andromeda Galaxy's significant Doppler shift. In 1922 Ernst Öpik
presented a method to estimate the distance of Andromeda using the
measured velocities of its stars. His result placed the Andromeda Nebula
far outside our galaxy at a distance of about 450,000 parsecs
(1,500,000 light-years). Edwin Hubble settled the debate in 1925 when he identified extragalactic Cepheid variable stars for the first time on astronomical photos of Andromeda. These were made using the 2.5-metre (8 ft 2 in) Hooker telescope,
and they enabled the distance of Great Andromeda Nebula to be
determined. His measurement demonstrated conclusively that this feature
was not a cluster of stars and gas within our own galaxy, but an
entirely separate galaxy located a significant distance from the Milky
Way.
In 1943, Walter Baade
was the first person to resolve stars in the central region of the
Andromeda Galaxy. Baade identified two distinct populations of stars
based on their metallicity,
naming the young, high-velocity stars in the disk Type I and the older,
red stars in the bulge Type II. This nomenclature was subsequently
adopted for stars within the Milky Way, and elsewhere. (The existence of
two distinct populations had been noted earlier by Jan Oort.)
Baade also discovered that there were two types of Cepheid variables,
which resulted in a doubling of the distance estimate to Andromeda, as
well as the remainder of the Universe.
In 1950, radio emission from the Andromeda Galaxy was detected by Hanbury Brown and Cyril Hazard at Jodrell Bank Observatory. The first radio maps of the galaxy were made in the 1950s by John Baldwin and collaborators at the Cambridge Radio Astronomy Group. The core of the Andromeda Galaxy is called 2C 56 in the 2C
radio astronomy catalog. In 2009, the first planet may have been
discovered in the Andromeda Galaxy. This was detected using a technique
called microlensing, which is caused by the deflection of light by a massive object.
General
The
estimated distance of the Andromeda Galaxy from our own was doubled in
1953 when it was discovered that there is another, dimmer type of Cepheid. In the 1990s, measurements of both standard red giants as well as red clump stars from the Hipparcos satellite measurements were used to calibrate the Cepheid distances.
Formation and history
The Andromeda Galaxy was formed roughly 10 billion years ago from the collision and subsequent merger of smaller protogalaxies.
This violent collision formed most of the galaxy's (metal-rich) galactic halo and extended disk. During this epoch, its rate of star formation would have been very high, to the point of becoming a luminous infrared galaxy for roughly 100 million years. Andromeda and the Triangulum Galaxy
had a very close passage 2–4 billion years ago. This event produced
high rates of star formation across the Andromeda Galaxy's disk—even
some globular clusters—and disturbed M33's outer disk.
Over the past 2 billion years, star formation throughout
Andromeda's disk is thought to have decreased to the point of
near-inactivity. There have been interactions with satellite galaxies
like M32, M110, or others that have already been absorbed by Andromeda
Galaxy. These interactions have formed structures like Andromeda's Giant Stellar Stream.
A galactic merger roughly 100 million years ago is believed to be
responsible for a counter-rotating disk of gas found in the center of
Andromeda as well as the presence there of a relatively young (100
million years old) stellar population.
Distance estimate
At
least four distinct techniques have been used to estimate distances
from Earth to the Andromeda Galaxy. In 2003, using the infrared surface brightness fluctuations (I-SBF) and adjusting for the new period-luminosity value and a metallicity correction of −0.2 mag dex−1 in (O/H), an estimate of 2.57 ± 0.06 million light-years (1.625×1011 ± 3.8×109 astronomical units) was derived. A 2004 Cepheid variable method estimated the distance to be 2.51 ± 0.13 million light-years (770 ± 40 kpc). In 2005, an eclipsing binary star was discovered in the Andromeda Galaxy. The binary is two hot blue stars of types
O and B. By studying the eclipses of the stars, astronomers were able
to measure their sizes. Knowing the sizes and temperatures of the stars,
they were able to measure their absolute magnitude. When the visual and absolute magnitudes are known, the distance to the star can be measured. The stars lie at a distance of 2.52×106 ± 0.14×106 ly (1.594×1011 ± 8.9×109 AU) and the whole Andromeda Galaxy at about 2.5×106 ly (1.6×1011 AU). This new value is in excellent agreement with the previous, independent Cepheid-based distance value. The TRGB method was also used in 2005 giving a distance of 2.56×106 ± 0.08×106 ly (1.619×1011 ± 5.1×109 AU). Averaged together, these distance estimates give a value of 2.54×106 ± 0.11×106 ly (1.606×1011 ± 7.0×109 AU). And, from this, the diameter of Andromeda at the widest point is estimated to be 220 ± 3 kly (67,450 ± 920 pc). Applying trigonometry (angular diameter), this is equivalent to an apparent 4.96° angle in the sky.
Mass and luminosity estimates
Mass
Until 2018, mass estimates for the Andromeda Galaxy's halo (including dark matter) gave a value of approximately 1.5×1012 M☉ (or 1.5 trillion solar masses) compared to 8×1011 M☉
for the Milky Way. This contradicted earlier measurements, that seemed
to indicate that Andromeda Galaxy and the Milky Way are almost equal in
mass. In 2018, the equality of mass was re-established by radio results
as approximately 8×1011 M☉
In 2006, Andromeda Galaxy's spheroid was determined to have a higher stellar density than that of the Milky Way and its galactic stellar disk was estimated at about twice the diameter of that of the Milky Way. The total stellar mass of Andromeda Galaxy is estimated to be between 8×1011 M☉ and 1.1×1011 M☉., (i.e., around twice as massive as that of the Milky Way) and 1.5×1011 M☉, with around 30% of that mass in the central bulge, 56% in the disk, and the remaining 14% in the halo.
The radio results (similar mass to Milky Way galaxy) should be taken as
likeliest as of 2018, although clearly this matter is still under
active investigation by a number of research groups worldwide.
In addition to stars, Andromeda Galaxy's interstellar medium contains at least around 7.2×109 M☉ in the form of neutral hydrogen, at least 3.4×108 M☉ as molecular hydrogen (within its innermost 10 kiloparsecs), and 5.4×107 M☉ of dust.
Andromeda Galaxy is surrounded by a massive halo of hot gas that
is estimated to contain half the mass of the stars in the galaxy. The
nearly invisible halo stretches about a million light-years from its
host galaxy, halfway to our Milky Way galaxy. Simulations of galaxies
indicate the halo formed at the same time as the Andromeda Galaxy. The
halo is enriched in elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, formed
from supernovae and its properties are those expected for a galaxy that lies in the "green valley" of the Galaxy color–magnitude diagram.
Supernovae erupt in Andromeda Galaxy's star-filled disk and eject these
heavier elements into space. Over Andromeda Galaxy's lifetime, nearly
half of the heavy elements made by its stars have been ejected far
beyond the galaxy's 200,000-light-year-diameter stellar disk.
Luminosity
Compared to the Milky Way, the Andromeda Galaxy appears to have predominantly older stars with ages >7×109 years. The estimated luminosity of Andromeda Galaxy, ~2.6×1010 L☉, is about 25% higher than that of our own galaxy. However, the galaxy has a high inclination as seen from Earth and its interstellar dust
absorbs an unknown amount of light, so it is difficult to estimate its
actual brightness and other authors have given other values for the
luminosity of the Andromeda Galaxy (some authors even propose it is the
second-brightest galaxy within a radius of 10 mega-parsecs of the Milky Way, after the Sombrero Galaxy, with an absolute magnitude of around -22.21 or close).
An estimation done with the help of Spitzer Space Telescope published in 2010 suggests an absolute magnitude (in the blue) of −20.89 (that with a color index of +0.63 translates to an absolute visual magnitude of −21.52, compared to −20.9 for the Milky Way), and a total luminosity in that wavelength of 3.64×1010 L☉.
The rate of star formation in the Milky Way is much higher, with
Andromeda Galaxy producing only about one solar mass per year compared
to 3–5 solar masses for the Milky Way. The rate of novae in the Milky Way is also double that of Andromeda Galaxy.
This suggests that the latter once experienced a great star formation
phase, but is now in a relative state of quiescence, whereas the Milky
Way is experiencing more active star formation. Should this continue, the luminosity of the Milky Way may eventually overtake that of Andromeda Galaxy.
According to recent studies, the Andromeda Galaxy lies in what in the galaxy color–magnitude diagram
is known as the "green valley", a region populated by galaxies like the
Milky Way in transition from the "blue cloud" (galaxies actively
forming new stars) to the "red sequence" (galaxies that lack star
formation). Star formation activity in green valley galaxies is slowing
as they run out of star-forming gas in the interstellar medium. In
simulated galaxies with similar properties to Andromeda Galaxy, star
formation is expected to extinguish within about five billion years from
the now, even accounting for the expected, short-term increase in the
rate of star formation due to the collision between Andromeda Galaxy and
the Milky Way.
Structure
Based on its appearance in visible light, the Andromeda Galaxy is classified as an SA(s)b galaxy in the de Vaucouleurs–Sandage extended classification system of spiral galaxies. However, data from the 2MASS survey showed that Andromeda is actually a barred spiral galaxy, like the Milky Way, with Andromeda's bar oriented along its long axis.
In 2005, astronomers used the Keck telescopes to show that the tenuous sprinkle of stars extending outward from the galaxy is actually part of the main disk itself.
This means that the spiral disk of stars in the Andromeda Galaxy is
three times larger in diameter than previously estimated. This
constitutes evidence that there is a vast, extended stellar disk that
makes the galaxy more than 220,000 light-years (67,000 parsecs)
in diameter. Previously, estimates of the Andromeda Galaxy's size
ranged from 70,000 to 120,000 light-years (21,000 to 37,000 pc) across.
The galaxy is inclined an estimated 77° relative to Earth (where
an angle of 90° would be viewed directly from the side). Analysis of the
cross-sectional shape of the galaxy appears to demonstrate a
pronounced, S-shaped warp, rather than just a flat disk.
A possible cause of such a warp could be gravitational interaction with
the satellite galaxies near the Andromeda Galaxy. The Galaxy M33 could be responsible for some warp in Andromeda's arms, though more precise distances and radial velocities are required.
Spectroscopic studies have provided detailed measurements of the rotational velocity of the Andromeda Galaxy
as a function of radial distance from the core. The rotational velocity
has a maximum value of 225 kilometers per second (140 mi/s) at 1,300 light-years (82,000,000 astronomical units)
from the core, and it has its minimum possibly as low as 50 kilometers
per second (31 mi/s) at 7,000 light-years (440,000,000 AU) from the
core. Further out, rotational velocity rises out to a radius of 33,000
light-years (2.1×109 AU),
where it reaches a peak of 250 kilometers per second (160 mi/s). The
velocities slowly decline beyond that distance, dropping to around 200
kilometers per second (120 mi/s) at 80,000 light-years (5.1×109 AU). These velocity measurements imply a concentrated mass of about 6×109 M☉ in the nucleus. The total mass of the galaxy increases linearly out to 45,000 light-years (2.8×109 AU), then more slowly beyond that radius.
The spiral arms of the Andromeda Galaxy are outlined by a series of HII regions, first studied in great detail by Walter Baade
and described by him as resembling "beads on a string". His studies
show two spiral arms that appear to be tightly wound, although they are
more widely spaced than in our galaxy. His descriptions of the spiral structure, as each arm crosses the major axis of the Andromeda Galaxy, are as follows:
Arms (N=cross M31's major axis at north, S=cross M31's major axis at south) | Distance from center (arcminutes) (N*/S*) | Distance from center (kpc) (N*/S*) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
N1/S1 | 3.4/1.7 | 0.7/0.4 | Dust arms with no OB associations of HII regions. |
N2/S2 | 8.0/10.0 | 1.7/2.1 | Dust arms with some OB associations. |
N3/S3 | 25/30 | 5.3/6.3 | As per N2/S2, but with some HII regions too. |
N4/S4 | 50/47 | 11/9.9 | Large numbers of OB associations, HII regions, and little dust. |
N5/S5 | 70/66 | 15/14 | As per N4/S4 but much fainter. |
N6/S6 | 91/95 | 19/20 | Loose OB associations. No dust visible. |
N7/S7 | 110/116 | 23/24 | As per N6/S6 but fainter and inconspicuous. |
Since the Andromeda Galaxy is seen close to edge-on, it is difficult
to study its spiral structure. Rectified images of the galaxy seem to
show a fairly normal spiral galaxy, exhibiting two continuous trailing
arms that are separated from each other by a minimum of about 13,000 light-years (820,000,000 astronomical units)
and that can be followed outward from a distance of roughly 1,600
light-years (100,000,000 AU) from the core. Alternative spiral
structures have been proposed such as a single spiral arm or a flocculent pattern of long, filamentary, and thick spiral arms.
The most likely cause of the distortions of the spiral pattern is thought to be interaction with galaxy satellites M32 and M110. This can be seen by the displacement of the neutral hydrogen clouds from the stars.
In 1998, images from the European Space Agency's Infrared Space Observatory demonstrated that the overall form of the Andromeda Galaxy may be transitioning into a ring galaxy.
The gas and dust within the galaxy is generally formed into several
overlapping rings, with a particularly prominent ring formed at a radius
of 32,000 light-years (2.0×109 AU) (10 kiloparsecs) from the core, nicknamed by some astronomers the ring of fire.
This ring is hidden from visible light images of the galaxy because it
is composed primarily of cold dust, and most of the star formation that
is taking place in the Andromeda Galaxy is concentrated there.
Later studies with the help of the Spitzer Space Telescope
showed how Andromeda Galaxy's spiral structure in the infrared appears
to be composed of two spiral arms that emerge from a central bar and
continue beyond the large ring mentioned above. Those arms, however, are
not continuous and have a segmented structure.
Close examination of the inner region of the Andromeda Galaxy
with the same telescope also showed a smaller dust ring that is believed
to have been caused by the interaction with M32 more than 200 million
years ago. Simulations show that the smaller galaxy passed through the
disk of the Andromeda Galaxy along the latter's polar axis. This
collision stripped more than half the mass from the smaller M32 and
created the ring structures in Andromeda.
It is the co-existence of the long-known large ring-like feature in the
gas of Messier 31, together with this newly discovered inner ring-like
structure, offset from the barycenter, that suggested a nearly head-on
collision with the satellite M32, a milder version of the Cartwheel encounter.
Studies of the extended halo of the Andromeda Galaxy show that it
is roughly comparable to that of the Milky Way, with stars in the halo
being generally "metal-poor", and increasingly so with greater distance.
This evidence indicates that the two galaxies have followed similar
evolutionary paths. They are likely to have accreted and assimilated
about 100–200 low-mass galaxies during the past 12 billion years.
The stars in the extended halos of the Andromeda Galaxy and the Milky
Way may extend nearly one third the distance separating the two
galaxies.
Nucleus
M31 is known to harbor a dense and compact star cluster at its very
center. In a large telescope it creates a visual impression of a star
embedded in the more diffuse surrounding bulge. In 1991, the Hubble Space Telescope was used to image Andromeda Galaxy's inner nucleus. The nucleus consists of two concentrations separated by 1.5 parsecs (4.9 ly).
The brighter concentration, designated as P1, is offset from the center
of the galaxy. The dimmer concentration, P2, falls at the true center
of the galaxy and contains a black hole measured at 3–5 × 107 M☉ in 1993, and at 1.1–2.3 × 108 M☉ in 2005. The velocity dispersion of material around it is measured to be ≈ 160 km/s.
It has been proposed that the observed double nucleus could be explained if P1 is the projection of a disk of stars in an eccentric orbit around the central black hole. The eccentricity is such that stars linger at the orbital apocenter, creating a concentration of stars. P2 also contains a compact disk of hot, spectral-class
A stars. The A stars are not evident in redder filters, but in blue and
ultraviolet light they dominate the nucleus, causing P2 to appear more
prominent than P1.
While at the initial time of its discovery it was hypothesized
that the brighter portion of the double nucleus is the remnant of a
small galaxy "cannibalized" by Andromeda Galaxy,
this is no longer considered a viable explanation, largely because such
a nucleus would have an exceedingly short lifetime due to tidal disruption
by the central black hole. While this could be partially resolved if P1
had its own black hole to stabilize it, the distribution of stars in P1
does not suggest that there is a black hole at its center.
Discrete sources
Apparently, by late 1968, no X-rays had been detected from the Andromeda Galaxy. A balloon flight on October 20, 1970, set an upper limit for detectable hard X-rays from the Andromeda Galaxy. The Swift
BAT all-sky survey successfully detected hard X-rays coming from a
region centered 6 arc-seconds away from the galaxy center. The emission
above 25 keV was later found to be originating from a single source
named 3XMM J004232.1+411314, and identified as a binary system where a compact object (a neutron star or a black hole) accretes matter from a star.
Multiple X-ray sources have since been detected in the Andromeda Galaxy, using observations from the European Space Agency's (ESA) XMM-Newton orbiting observatory. Robin Barnard et al. hypothesized that these are candidate black holes or neutron stars,
which are heating the incoming gas to millions of kelvins and emitting
X-rays. Neutron stars and black holes can be distinguished mainly by
measuring their masses. An observation campaign of NuSTAR space mission identified 40 objects of this kind in the galaxy.
There are approximately 460 globular clusters associated with the Andromeda Galaxy. The most massive of these clusters, identified as Mayall II, nicknamed Globular One, has a greater luminosity than any other known globular cluster in the Local Group of galaxies. It contains several million stars, and is about twice as luminous as Omega Centauri, the brightest known globular cluster in the Milky Way.
Globular One (or G1) has several stellar populations and a structure
too massive for an ordinary globular. As a result, some consider G1 to
be the remnant core of a dwarf galaxy that was consumed by Andromeda in the distant past. The globular with the greatest apparent brightness is G76 which is located in the south-west arm's eastern half.
Another massive globular cluster, named 037-B327 and discovered in 2006 as is heavily reddened by the Andromeda Galaxy's interstellar dust, was thought to be more massive than G1 and the largest cluster of the Local Group; however, other studies have shown it is actually similar in properties to G1.
Unlike the globular clusters of the Milky Way, which show a
relatively low age dispersion, Andromeda Galaxy's globular clusters have
a much larger range of ages: from systems as old as the galaxy itself
to much younger systems, with ages between a few hundred million years
to five billion years.
In 2005, astronomers discovered a completely new type of star
cluster in the Andromeda Galaxy. The new-found clusters contain hundreds
of thousands of stars, a similar number of stars that can be found in
globular clusters. What distinguishes them from the globular clusters is
that they are much larger—several hundred light-years across—and
hundreds of times less dense. The distances between the stars are,
therefore, much greater within the newly discovered extended clusters.
In 2012, a microquasar,
a radio burst emanating from a smaller black hole, was detected in the
Andromeda Galaxy. The progenitor black hole is located near the galactic
center and has about 10 . Discovered through a data collected by the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton probe, and subsequently observed by NASA's Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission and Chandra X-Ray Observatory, the Very Large Array, and the Very Long Baseline Array, the microquasar was the first observed within the Andromeda Galaxy and the first outside of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Satellites
Like the Milky Way, the Andromeda Galaxy has satellite galaxies, consisting of 14 known dwarf galaxies. The best known and most readily observed satellite galaxies are M32 and M110.
Based on current evidence, it appears that M32 underwent a close
encounter with the Andromeda Galaxy in the past. M32 may once have been a
larger galaxy that had its stellar disk removed by M31, and underwent a
sharp increase of star formation in the core region, which lasted until the relatively recent past.
M110 also appears to be interacting with the Andromeda Galaxy,
and astronomers have found in the halo of the latter a stream of
metal-rich stars that appear to have been stripped from these satellite
galaxies. M110 does contain a dusty lane, which may indicate recent or ongoing star formation. M32 have young population as well.
In 2006, it was discovered that nine of the satellite galaxies
lie in a plane that intersects the core of the Andromeda Galaxy; they
are not randomly arranged as would be expected from independent
interactions. This may indicate a common tidal origin for the
satellites.
Collision with the Milky Way
The Andromeda Galaxy is approaching the Milky Way at about 110 kilometers per second (68 miles per second). It has been measured approaching relative to our Sun at around 300 km/s (190 mi/s)
as the Sun orbits around the center of our galaxy at a speed of
approximately 225 km/s (140 mi/s). This makes the Andromeda Galaxy one
of about 100 observable blueshifted galaxies.
Andromeda Galaxy's tangential or sideways velocity with respect to the
Milky Way is relatively much smaller than the approaching velocity and
therefore it is expected to collide directly with the Milky Way in about
4 billion years. A likely outcome of the collision is that the galaxies will merge to form a giant elliptical galaxy or perhaps even a large disc galaxy. Such events are frequent among the galaxies in galaxy groups. The fate of the Earth and the Solar System
in the event of a collision is currently unknown. Before the galaxies
merge, there is a small chance that the Solar System could be ejected
from the Milky Way or join the Andromeda Galaxy.
Amateur observing
The Andromeda Galaxy is bright enough to be seen with the naked eye, even with some light pollution. Andromeda is best seen during autumn nights in the Northern Hemisphere, when from mid-latitudes the galaxy reaches zenith (its highest point at midnight) so can be seen almost all night. From the Southern Hemisphere, it is most visible at the same months, that is in spring, and away from our equator does not reach a high altitude over the northern horizon, making it difficult to observe. Binoculars can reveal some larger structures and its two brightest satellite galaxies, M32 and M110. An amateur telescope can reveal Andromeda's disk, some of its brightest globular clusters, dark dust lanes and the large star cloud NGC 206.