The Backyard Astronomer: How to spot our neighbouring galaxy without a telescope or binoculars

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4 years ago

Looking up at a clear sky is something we do naturally, whether you are taking a late-night stroll, walking the dog, or just relaxing on the deck.

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Without the aid of binoculars or a telescope, though, our eyes have a difficult time seeing the faint celestial objects that reside in the universe. We do see simple bright objects like the moon and prominent stars and planets, but that is the limit that our one-power eyeballs can see.

However, this is not always the case.

Because most people live in or around light-polluted cities and towns, the true night sky is hidden behind a dome of scattered light. To appreciate the wonders of the cosmos, a trip to the countryside on a moonless night, away from all lights, is a must. Once you experience being under a blanket of distant suns, your mind will fill with so many questions, with the most common being, “Are we alone?”

Andromeda Galaxy

Every star you see in the sky belongs to our galaxy, including the grayish band that stretches high overhead. This is what the Romans called the “Via Lactia”, the Milky Way, and it is the collective glow of starlight. There are an estimated 250 billion stars in our galaxy, which, from far, looks like a pancake disk; this disk is more than 100,000 light-years in length and a few light-years thick, with a larger bulge—called the nucleus—in the middle.

Our galaxy is one of an estimated two trillion in the observable universe. This was not the case before the night of October 5, 1923, when Edwin Hubble imaged a faint patch of light in the constellation Andromeda with a 100-inch telescope. It was determined that this was “another” galaxy. The Milky Way was no longer a unique object but one of many. You can see this galaxy on a clear night in a dark sky even without a telescope or binoculars. It is called the Andromeda Galaxy and is located two-and-a-quarter million light-years away. That means the photons of light that enter your eyes left the galaxy two-and-a-quarter million years ago.

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