The NGC 3370 galaxy is a spiral galaxy 100 million light-years (redshift of 0.008) from Earth in the Leo constellation, and is 100,000 light-years (the same size as the Milky Way) in diameter, and contains about 100 billion stars (same number of stars as the Milky Way). It emitted its light 100 million years ago, when the universe was 13,600 million years old.
There are several thousand background galaxies behind the NGC 3370 galaxy (with billions of stars, planets, and moons in each one; as well as asteroids and nebulae). Their light has taken 13 billion years to reach Earth.
up to 13 billion light years away.
NGC 3370 is a barred spiral galaxy in the constellation Leo. It contains stars, gas, dust, and possibly planets within its structure. Comets are not typically found within galaxies, but rather in the outer reaches of the solar system.
NGC 3486 is a type Sb spiral galaxy.
The list of unlikely candidates for the Star Wars galaxy are: ACS-GC 13003331 BFB2004 NGC 4676 1176 BFB2004 NGC 4676 1289 BFB2004 NGC 4676 2934 BFB2004 VV 29 127 BFB2004 VV 29 3094 COSMOS 1161898 ISOHDFS 27 NGC 253 NGC 514 NGC 891 NGC 908 NGC 2770 NGC 3370 NGC 5247 NGC 5364 NGC 6118 NGC 7331 PGC 165514 PGC 169337 PGC 198197 PGC 1175571 PGC 1368199 PGC 1375823 PGC 1442333 PGC 1669768 PGC 1762846 PGC 2416052 PGC 2631284 PGC 3080366 and millions of other spiral galaxies in the universe
No. NGC 5458 is a galaxy.
NGC 3079 is a galaxy, not a planet.
Believe it or not, the NGC 7331 group of galaxies.
Messier 81 (or NGC 3031 or Bode's Galaxy) is a spiral galaxy about 12 million light years from us.
It is in the constellation Reticulum.
The Pinwheel Galaxy (Messier 101 or NGC 5457)
Galaxy NGC 1232 was discovered by William Herschel.