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The above image is of the famous Andromeda Galaxy as photographed by the
Palomar Observatory's 48-inch Samuel Oschin Schmidt Telescope with the QUEST
camera.
The Andromeda Galaxy is the closest spiral galaxy to our own Milky Way
Galaxy. It is located some 2.9 million light-years away. From dark light
pollution free skies it is one of the most distant objects visible to unaided
eyes. In 1764 Charles Messier made it the thirty first object, M 31, of his
famous catalog.
Also visible in the image are two of Andromeda's companion galaxies. M 32 is
visible to the right of the bright nucleus of the Andromeda Galaxy and M 110 is
visible near the lower left part of the image.
The image was taken with the QUEST camera operating in driftscan mode. During
driftscan mode the telescope is stationary. Because the telescope does not
correct for Earth's rotation objects drift across the field of view. The QUEST
camera records the data as objects drift past. The image was taken 2003 Oct 6 UT
through a Gunn i filter. The image has been dark subtracted and flattened. The
dark lines and bright streaks are not real, but are artifacts of the imaging
process.
More information on the Palomar-QUEST Survey
Technical information on the QUEST camera
Images are copyrighted by their respective
owners. Contact the photographers directly
for permission to use their images for any purpose.
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