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The Triangulum Galaxy is a spiral galaxy 2.73 million light-years (ly) from Earth in the constellation Triangulum. It is catalogued as Messier 33 or NGC (New General Catalogue) 598.
The Triangulum Galaxy, also known as Messier 33, was discovered by Giovanni Battista Hodierna in the 17th century. A distant member of the Local Group, it is about 2.3 million light-years away, and at magnitude 5.8 it is bright enough to be seen by the naked eye under dark skies.
The studies also suggest that M33, the Triangulum Galaxy—the third-largest and third-brightest galaxy of the Local Group—will participate in the collision event, too. Its most likely fate is to end up orbiting the merger remnant of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies and finally to merge with it in an even more distant future.
The Triangulum Galaxy (M33) is the third-largest member of the Local Group, with a mass of approximately 5 × 10 10 M ☉ (1 × 10 41 kg), and is the third spiral galaxy. It is unclear whether the Triangulum Galaxy is a companion of the Andromeda Galaxy; the two galaxies are 750,000 light years apart, [7] and experienced a close passage 2–4 ...
NGC 604 is an H II region inside the Triangulum Galaxy. It was discovered by William Herschel on September 11, 1784. It is among the largest H II regions in the Local Group of galaxies; at the galaxy's estimated distance of 2.7 million light-years , its longest diameter is roughly 1,520 light years (~460 parsecs ), over 40 times the size of the ...
This is a list of notable stars in the constellation Triangulum, sorted by decreasing brightness.
Triangulum Galaxy. The Triangulum subgroup is made up of the Triangulum Galaxy (M33) and its satellites. Although the Triangulum Galaxy does not have any proven satellite galaxies, a number of galaxies are suspected of being in the system.
The plane of satellite galaxies points toward a nearby group of galaxies ( M81 Group ), possibly tracing the large-scale distribution of dark matter . It is unknown whether the Triangulum Galaxy is a satellite of Andromeda.
M33 X-7 lies within the Triangulum Galaxy which is approximately 3 million light-years (ly) distant from the Milky Way in constellation Triangulum. This would make M33 X-7 one of the furthest confirmed stellar mass black holes known.
Categories: Spiral galaxies. Triangulum Subgroup. Triangulum. Hidden categories: Commons category link from Wikidata. Wikipedia categories named after galaxies.