barred spiral galaxy within the Local Group
The Andromeda Galaxy is a barred spiral galaxy—a massive collection of stars, gas, and dust arranged in a spiral pattern with a bar-like structure through its center—that belongs to our Local Group of galaxies. It matters because it is one of the nearest and most significant galaxies to our own Milky Way, making it crucial for understanding galaxy structure and our place in the universe.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
The Andromeda Galaxy is a barred spiral galaxy and is the nearest major galaxy to the Milky Way. It was originally named the Andromeda Nebula and is cataloged as Messier 31, M31, and NGC 224. Andromeda has a D25 isophotal diameter of about 46.56 kiloparsecs (152,000 light-years) and is approximately 765 kpc (2.5 million light-years) from Earth. The galaxy's name stems from the area of Earth's sky in which it appears, the constellation of Andromeda, which itself is named after the princess who was the wife of Perseus in Greek mythology.
The virial mass of the Andromeda Galaxy is of the same order of magnitude as that of the Milky Way, at 1 trillion solar masses (2.0×10 kilograms). The mass of either galaxy is difficult to estimate with any accuracy, but it was long thought that the Andromeda Galaxy was more massive than the Milky Way by a margin of some 25% to 50%. However, this has been called into question by early-21st-century studies indicating a possibly lower mass for the Andromeda Galaxy and a higher mass for the Milky Way. The Andromeda Galaxy has a diameter of about 46.56 kpc (152,000 ly), making it the largest member of the Local Group of galaxies in terms of extension.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).