Take every galaxy in a reasonable atlas, lay them out on a table, and a pattern jumps out. Some are featureless ellipsoids — glowing eggs, no arms, no structure. Others are flat disks threaded with spiral arms and dust lanes. A surprising number have a straight bar of stars crossing the nucleus before the arms take off. And then there are the train wrecks — galaxies too messy to file.
Edwin Hubble noticed this in the 1920s and published a classification in 1926 that still runs the show. Draw a tuning fork. On the handle: ellipticals, from E0 (near-spherical) through E7 (cigar-shaped). At the branch point: S0 lenticulars, disk galaxies without spiral arms. On the top prong: normal spirals Sa–Sc, from tight-wound with big bulges to loose-armed with small bulges. On the bottom prong: barred spirals SBa–SBc. Trailing off the end: irregulars, everything else.
Hubble thought ellipticals evolved into spirals. He was wrong about that. But the morphological classes turned out to mean something deeper. Ellipticals are gas-poor, dust-poor, dominated by old red stars, with random stellar orbits — they look yellow-orange. Spirals are gas-rich, dust-laden, still forming stars in their arms, orbits organized around a disk — they look blue where the new stars are. The Milky Way is an SBbc: a barred spiral with a modest bulge and well-organized arms. M31 Andromeda, our nearest big neighbour, is Sb. M87 in Virgo is a giant E1, weighing in at maybe a trillion solar masses of mostly old stars.
You can see the morphological sequence at the eyepiece in a single night. M31 is the textbook Sb — the outer arms fade to tantalizing wisps in a 6-inch from dark skies. M51 is a fierce Sc with dust lanes and a companion. M87 is an E1 that looks, honestly, like a fuzzy ball — which is exactly what an old elliptical should look like. M82 in Ursa Major is an irregular starburst, tortured by a close pass with M81 300 million years ago and now gushing superwinds of ionized gas from its centre.
Did you know?
Roughly two-thirds of all disk galaxies in the nearby universe — including our own Milky Way — are barred. For decades astronomers assumed bars were rare. We simply couldn't see them well in edge-on spirals, and we misclassified many mildly-barred galaxies as unbarred. Infrared surveys like 2MASS revealed bars hidden under dust and brought the count up dramatically.