Messier 32 is a dwarf elliptical galaxy about 2.65 million light years away in the constellation Andromeda
Maffei 1 is a giant elliptical galaxy in the constellation about 10 billion light years away in the constellation Cassiopeia. It is the closest giant elliptical galaxy to the Milky Way
Age. An elliptical galaxy is much older.
It also does not show any signs of arms or new star formation.
it is true because there are lots and lots of galaxies that are ellipitical
No, Milky Way is a barred spiral.
They look like eclipse ones like s82o.
Yes.
You can have dwarf elliptical galaxies.
Yes
Elliptical galaxies are large blob shaped galaxies that most galaxies will eventually look like. Elliptical galaxies are what happens when two or more large galaxies collide and coalesce.
yes they do
Both - all galaxies contain young and old stars.
Older stars
I think elliptical galaxies are the galaxies you are referring to. Scientist normally describe them as a flatted disk shape. These galaxies contain mainly older stars.
spiral galaxies (ours), irregular galaxies, and elliptical galaxies.
By virtue of their name, dwarf galaxies are smaller. Most galaxies are dwarf galaxies.
While spiral galaxies are bright, elliptical galaxies are dim. Spiral galaxies are hotbeds of star formation, but elliptical galaxies aren't nearly as prolific because they contain less gas and dust, which means fewer new (and brighter) stars are born
Spiral and Elliptical