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The Andromeda Galaxy spans a portion of the sky that is larger than the full moon! But a full moon would wash out the sky, making the galaxy hard to see, even with binoculars. When the sky is dark it can be seen as a hazy smudge, making it the most distant object (more than two million light years away) that we can see with the naked eye. In the eyepiece of a telescope the smudge becomes larger, but to detect the wonderful spiral structure and faint blue outer arms of this galaxy requires the light-accumulating power of a piece of film placed at the telescopeÍs focal point. The stars in this picture are in the foreground, artifacts from our own galaxy, which we must look through to see into our neighborÍs part of the universe. |
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Photographs and text on these pages © Copyright 1997-2005 by Thor Olson. All rights reserved. |
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