can be seen with the naked eye if youre in a very dark area, kight pollution make it almost invisible, is easier to detect it presence during the month of December
These constellations border Andromeda: Perseus Cassiopeia Lacerta Pegasus Pisces Triangulum
After the Milky Way galaxy, there are many other galaxies in the universe. Some of the closest galaxies to us are the Andromeda galaxy and the Triangulum galaxy. Beyond these, there are billions of other galaxies in the universe, each containing billions of stars.
Some constellations near Andromeda include Pegasus, Cassiopeia, Perseus, and Triangulum. These constellations are all visible in the northern hemisphere and can be found surrounding the Andromeda galaxy in the night sky.
Oh, thank you for asking, friend! In addition to our beautiful Milky Way, there are many other galaxies in our vast universe with charming names like Andromeda, Triangulum, and Whirlpool. Each galaxy has its own splendor and wonder, just waiting for you to explore and appreciate.
The term "alter-constellation" is not a common term or concept. It may be a typo or a specific phrase used in a certain context. Can you provide more information or clarify your question so I can assist you better?
Triangulum: - Try-An-gou-lum
That doesn't make sense - there is not "a" triangulum galaxy, it is "the" triangulum galaxy. In other words, this is the proper name of one specific galaxy.
At least two constellations: Triangulum, and Triangulum Australe.
Triangulum is the constellation between Aries the Ram and Andromeda. It's also the name of a spiral galaxy - it's named The Triangulum Galaxy because it's found in the Triangulum Constellation.
The galaxy Triangulum is like the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies a Spiral Galaxy
It is spiral barrered
The name tells us that it is in the Triangulum constellation. That indicates the general direction. Also, the Triangulum Galaxy is approximately 3 million light-years away - fairly close for a galaxy. In other words, it is part of the Local Group.
Aries
Triangle comes from the Latin word -- triangulum,
Canis Major Dwarf Galaxy. If you meant what's the closest spiral galaxy, then the answer is the Triangulum Galaxy.
The Triangulum Galaxy (also known as M33 and NGC 598) is a spiral galaxy 3 million light-years from Earth in the Triangulum constellation, and is 60,000 light-years in diameter, and contains 40 billion stars.
400,000,000,000.