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> The Andromeda galaxy seen in UV

The Andromeda galaxy seen in UV

author: Nasa/JPL/Caltech/Novapix

reference: a-gax02-24050

Image Size 300 DPI: 52 * 52 cm

The GALEX observation of the large galaxy in Andromeda, Messier 31, was performed during September and October 2003. The image is a mosaic of 10 separate GALEX images combining the Far UV (colored blue) and Near UV detector (colored red) images together to make a color image of the sky nearly six full moons across. The Andromeda galaxy is the most massive in the local group of galaxies, which includes our Milky Way, and is the nearest large galaxy to our own. The GALEX image shows blue regions of young, hot, high mass stars tracing out the spiral arms where star formation is occurring, and the central orange-white "bulge" of old, cooler stars formed long ago. The red stars in this image are foreground stars in our own Milky Way galaxy.

Keywords for this photo:

ANDROMEDA - ASTRONOMY - E2 - E6p - ELLIPTICAL GALAXY - GALAXY - GALEX - LOCAL GROUP - M110 - M31 - M32 - NGC 205 - NGC 221 - NGC 224 - POSTER - Sb - SPIRAL GALAXY - STAR - STAR FORMATION - ULTRAVIOLET - UV -