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M31

Andromeda Galaxy

Galaxy Andromeda Mag 3.4

Object Data

Catalog Designation
M31
Type
Galaxy
Constellation
Andromeda
Magnitude
3.4
Right Ascension
00h 42m 44.3s
Declination
+41° 16' 09.0"
Distance
2,540,000 light-years
Angular Size
178.
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About M31

Description

The Andromeda Galaxy is the nearest large spiral galaxy to the Milky Way, located approximately 2.5 million light-years away. It is the largest galaxy in the Local Group, containing roughly one trillion stars and spanning about 220,000 light-years in diameter — larger than our own Milky Way. M31 has at least two prominent satellite galaxies visible in amateur telescopes: M32 (a compact elliptical) and M110 (a dwarf elliptical).

Observing Tips

Visible to the naked eye from dark sites as an elongated fuzzy patch in the constellation Andromeda. Binoculars show the bright central core and a hint of the disk's extent. A wide-field telescope at low power (around 30-50x) is ideal to frame the galaxy, which spans over 3 degrees — six times the width of the full Moon. Dark skies and averted vision reveal the dust lanes on the near side of the disk. The two satellite galaxies M32 and M110 are easy to spot in the same field of view.

History

First recorded by the Persian astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi in his Book of Fixed Stars in 964 AD, where he described it as a 'small cloud.' Charles Messier cataloged it as M31 in 1764. In 1912, Vesto Slipher measured its blueshift, showing it was approaching us. Edwin Hubble resolved individual Cepheid variable stars in M31 in 1924-25, proving it was a separate galaxy far beyond the Milky Way — settling the Great Debate about the nature of 'spiral nebulae.'

Fun Facts

The Andromeda Galaxy is on a collision course with the Milky Way and will merge with our galaxy in about 4.5 billion years, forming a giant elliptical galaxy sometimes called 'Milkomeda.' It is the most distant object easily visible to the naked eye. When you look at M31, the photons hitting your eyes have been traveling for 2.5 million years.

Community Photos (1)

Credit: Brody Wesner. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: Brody Wesner. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026