Quoted from SEDS
Known to Al-Sufi about AD 905.
Messier 31 (M31, NGC 224) is the famous Andromeda galaxy, our
nearest large neighbor galaxy, forming the
Local Group of
galaxies together with its companions (including
M32 and
M110, two bright
dwarf elliptical galaxies), our
Milky Way and its
companions, M33,
and others.
Visible to the naked eye even under moderate conditions, this object
was known as the "little cloud" to the Persian astronomer
Abd-al-Rahman Al-Sufi, who described
and depicted
it in 964 AD in his Book of Fixed Stars: It must have been
observed by and commonly known to Persian astronomers at Isfahan as
early as 905 AD, or earlier.
R.H. Allen
(1899/1963) reports that it was also appeared on a Dutch starmap of
1500.
Charles Messier, who
cataloged it on August 3, 1764, was obviously unaware of this early
reports, and ascribed its discovery to
Simon Marius,
who was the first to give a telescopic description in 1612, but
(according to R.H. Allen) didn't claim its discovery. Unaware of both Al
Sufi's and Marius' discovery,
Giovanni Batista Hodierna independently rediscovered this object
before 1654.
Edmond Halley, however, in his
1716
treat of "Nebulae", accounts the discovery of this "nebula" to the
French astronomer
Bullialdus (Ismail Bouillaud), who observed it in 1661; but
Bullialdus
mentions
that it had been seen 150 years earlier (in the early 1500s) by some
anonymous astronomer (R.H.
Allen, 1899/1963).
It was longly believed that the "Great Andromeda Nebula" was one of
the nearest nebulae.
William
Herschel believed, wrongly of course, that its distance would "not
exceed 2000 times the distance of Sirius" (17,000 light years);
nevertheless, he viewed it at the nearest "island universe" like our
Milky Way which he assumed to be a disk of 850 times the distance of
Sirius in diameter, and of a thickness of 155 times that distance.
It was
William Huggins, the pioneer of spectroscopy, who noted in 1864 the
difference between gaseous nebula with their line spectra and those
"nebulae" with star-like, continuous spectra, which we now know as
galaxies, and
found a
continuous spectrum for M31 (Huggins and
Miller 1864).
In 1887,
Isaac Roberts obtained the first photographs of the Andromeda
"Nebula," which showed the basic features of its spiral structure for
the first time.
In 1912,
V.M. Slipher of Lowell Observatory measured the radial velocity of
the Andromeda "nebula" and found it the highest velocity ever measured,
about 300 km/sec in approach. This already pointed to the extra-galactic
nature of this object. According to Burnham, a better value is about 266
km/sec, but R. Brent Tully gives 298 km/sec, and
NED
has again 300 +/- 4 km/s as the modern value. Note that all the previous
values describe the motion with respect to our Solar System, i.e.
heliocentric motion, not that w.r.t. the Milky Way's Galactic Center.
The latter value can be obtained by correcting for the motion of our
Solar System around that center. The modern values for Galactic rotation
and heliocentric radial velocity yield that the Andromeda Galaxy and the
Milky Way are approaching each other at about 100 km/sec.
In 1923,
Edwin Hubble found the
first Cepheid
variable in the Andromeda galaxy and thus established the
intergalactic distance and the true nature of M31 as a galaxy. Because
he was not aware of the two Cepheid classes, his distance was incorrect
by a factor of more than two, though. This error was not discovered
until 1953, when the 200-inch Palomar telescope was completed and had
started observing. Hubble published his epochal study of the Andromeda
"nebula" as an extragalactic stellar system (galaxy) in 1929 (Hubble
1929).
At modern times, the Andromeda galaxy is certainly the most studied
"external" galaxy. It is of particular interest because it allows
studies of all the features of a galaxy from outside which we also find
in Milky Way, but cannot observe as the greatest part of our Galaxy is
hidden by interstellar dust. Thus there are continuous studies of the
spiral structure, globular and open clusters, interstellar matter,
planetary nebulae, supernova remnants (see e.g. Jeff Kanipe's article in
Astronomy, November 1995, p. 46), galactic nucleus, companion
galaxies, and more.
Some of the features mentioned above are also of interest for the
amateur: Even Charles Messier found its two brightest companions,
M32 and
M110 which are
visible in binoculars and conspicuous in small telescopes, and
created
a drawing of all three. These two relatively bright and relatively
close companions are visible in many photos of M31, including the one in
this page. They are only the brightest of a "swarm" of smaller
companions which surround the Andromeda Galaxy, and form a subgroup of
the Local Group. At the time of this writing (September 2003), at least
11 of them are known: Besides M32 and M110 these are NGC 185, which was
discovered by William Herschel, and NGC 147 (discovered by d'Arrest) as
well as the very faint dwarf systems And I, And II, And III, possibly
And IV (which may however be a cluster or a remote background galaxy),
And V, And VI (also called the Pegasus dwarf), And VII (also Cassiopeia
dwarf), and And VIII. It is still not clear if
M33, the smaller
spiral galaxy in Triangulum, and its probable companion LGS 3 belong to
this subgroup, or the more remote Local Group member IC 1613, or one of
the possible member candidates UGCA 86 or UGCA 92.
The Andromeda Galaxy is in notable interaction with its companion
M32, which is apparently responsible for a considerable amount of
disturbance in the spiral structure of M31. The arms of neutral hydrogen
are displaced from those consisted of stars by 4000 light years, and
cannot be continuously followed in the area closest to its smaller
neighbor. Computer simulations have shown that the disturbances can be
modelled by a recent close encounter with a small companion of the mass
of M32. Very probably, M32 has also suffered from this encounter by
losing many stars which are now spread in Andromeda's halo.
The brightest globular cluster of the Andromeda Galaxy M31, G1, is
also the most luminous globular in the
Local Group of
Galaxies; its apparent visual brightness from Earth is still about
13.72 magnitudes. It outshines even the brightest globular in our Milky
Way, Omega
Centauri, and can be glimpsed even by better equipped amateurs under
very favorable conditions, with telescopes starting at 10-inch aperture
(see Leos Ondra's article in
Sky & Telescope, November 1995, p. 68-69). The
Hubble Space
Telescope was used to
investigate
globular cluster G1 in mid-1994 (published April 1996). While the
easiest, G1 is not the only M31 globular cluster which is in the reach
of large amateur telescopes: Amateur Steve Gottlieb has observed
18 globular clusters of M31 with a 44cm telescope. With their
14-inch Newton and CB245 CCD camera, observers of the Ferguson
Observatory near Kenwood, CA have
photographed G1 and four fainter M31 globulars.
Barmby et.al (2000) have found 435
globular cluster candidates in M31, and estimate the total number at 450
+/- 100.
The astrophotographer is even better off, as he can gather the
fainter light of the fine detail in the spiral arms, as in our image:
Amateurs can obtain most striking pictures even with inexpensive
equipment, from wide-field exposures to detailed close-ups. Also in
photography, better equipment pays off, as is demonstrated by our image,
which was obtained by (and is courtesy of) Texas amateur
Jason Ware, with a 6-inch
refractor.
More information on this image is available.
The brightest star cloud in the Andromeda galaxy M31 has been
assigned an own NGC number:
NGC 206,
because
William Herschel had taken it into
his
catalog as H V.36 on the grounds of his discovery observation of
October 17, 1786. It is the bright star cloud at the upper left, just
below a conspicuous dark nebula, in our photograph (very conspicuous in
the larger photo).
Despite the large amount of knowledge we now have about the Andromeda
Galaxy, its distance, though among the best known intergalactic
distances, is not really well-known. While it is well established that
M31 is about 15-16 times further away than the
Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC), the absolute value of this measure is still uncertain,
and in current sources, usually given between 2.4 and 2.9 million
light-years - a consequence of the uncertainty in the LMC distance and
thus the overall intergalactic distance scale. E.g., the semi-recent
correction from data by ESA's astrometrical satellite Hipparcos has
pushed this value up by more than 10 percent, from about 2.4-2.5 to the
about 2.9 million light-years we use here.
Under "normal" viewing conditions, the apparent size of the visible
Andromeda Galaxy is about 3 x 1 degrees (our acurate value, given above,
is 178x63 arc minutes, while
NED
gives 190x60'). Careful estimates of its angular diameter, performed
with 2-inch binoculars, by the French astronomer Robert Jonckhere in
1952-1953, revealed an extension of 5.2 times 1.1 degrees (reported by
Mallas), corresponding to a disk diameter of over 250,000 light years at
its distance of 2.9 million light years, so that this galaxy is more
than double as large as our own Milky Way galaxy ! Its mass was
estimated at 300 to 400 billion times that of the sun. Compared to the
newer estimates for our Milky Way galaxy, this is considerably less than
the mass of our galaxy, implying that the Milky Way may be much denser
than M31. These results are confirmed by new estimates of the total halo
masses, which turn out to be about 1.23 trillion solar masses for M31,
compared to 1.9 trillion for the Milky Way (Evans
and Wilkinson, 2000).
The Hubble Space Telescope has revealed that the Andromeda galaxy M31
has a double
nucleus. This suggests that either it has actually two bright
nuclei, probably because it has "eaten" a smaller galaxy which once
intruded its core, or parts of its only one core are obscured by dark
material, probably dust. In the first case, this second nucleus may be a
remainder of a
possibly violent dynamical encountering event in the earlier history
of the Local Group.
In the second case, the duplicity of Andromeda's nucleus would be an
illusion causes by a dark dust cloud obstructing parts of a single
nucleus in the center of M31.
Up to now, only one supernova has been recorded in the Andromeda
galaxy, the
Supernova 1885, also designated S Andromedae. This was the first
supernova discovered beyond our Milky Way galaxy, on August 20, 1885, by
Ernst Hartwig (1851-1923) at Dorpat Observatory in Estonia. It reached
mag 6 between August 17 and 20, and it was independently found by
several observers. However, only Hartwig realized its significance. It
faded to mag 16 in February 1890.
Historical
Observations and Descriptions of M31
Images of
M31 from the Isaac Newton Telescope, by the INT Team and David Malin
More
images of M31
Amateur
images of M31
IRAS
investigated M31 in the infrared light
Rosat has
explored M31 in the X-ray light
Chandra
X-ray Observatory images of M31
GALEX
images of M31 in the ultraviolet light
More
images of M31 and M32
Amateur
images of M31 and M32
Animation
explaining the structure of M31
Links
References
- P. Barmby, J.P. Huchra, J.P. Brodie, D.A.
Forbes, L.L. Schroeder and C.J. Grillmair, 2000. M31 Globular
Clusters: Colors and Metallicities. Astronomical Journal, Vol. 119,
pp. 727-747 (02/2000).
[ADS:
2000AJ....119..727B]
[Preprint: astro-ph/9911152]
- N.W. Evans and M.I. Wilkinson, 2000. The
Mass of the Andromeda Galaxy. Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society, Volume 316, Issue 4, pp. 929-942 (08/2000)
[ADS:
2000MNRAS.316..929E]
- Paul W. Hodge, 1981. Atlas of the
Andromeda Galaxy. University of Washington Press.
Available online.
- Paul W. Hodge, 1992. The Andromeda
Galaxy. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, Boston, London.
- Edwin P. Hubble, 1929. A Spiral Nebula
as a Stellar System, Messier 31. Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 69, pp.
103-157 and plates III-VIII.
[ADS:
1929ApJ....69..103H]
- William Huggins and W.A. Miller, 1864.
On the Specta of some of the Nebulae. Philosophical Transactions,
Vol. 154 (1864), pp. 437-444.
[ADS:
1864RSPT..154..437H]
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