Galaxy Gallery

(Click on thumbnail to view full size image and details.)

Messier 31

NGC 4725

NGC 4565

Messier 51

m81.jpg (124470 bytes)

Messier 81

Messier 100

NGC 4536

m109.jpg (39041 bytes)

Messier 109

NGC 5247

ngc253.jpg (40935 bytes)

NGC 253

NGC 3628

Messier 101

NGC 7331

M 106

Messier 104

m63.jpg (123209 bytes)

Messier 63

ngc5364.jpg (97375 bytes)

NGC 5364

ngc5921.jpg (12717 bytes)

NGC 5921

    Galaxies are gravitationally bound aggregations of billions of stars, dust and gas.  Apart from the stars of our own galaxy (the Milky Way), galaxies are the most common type of deep sky object.  Galaxies are also very distant and are far outside the confines of our own Milky Way Galaxy.  Because even the nearest galaxy (the Andromeda Galaxy) is nearly 3 million light years distant, galaxies are faint and small and most offer only limited visual detail, even in the largest of amateur telescopes.  Thus the reason for photography.  With the use of film or CCD cameras, such as are used to image the objects on the site, amateurs with relatively small aperture telescopes can image what the eye cannot see.  The galaxies shown on this page range from 3 million to 40 million light years distant - that is, the light from the galaxies shown below took up to 40 million years to reach my telescope and camera.  Thus, the objects depicted here appear as they existed millions of years ago.  To look at these images is to look millions of years into the past.

    Galaxies come in five basic varieties;  spiral (barred and non-barred types), elliptical, lenticular, irregular, and peculiar.  Most of the galaxies shown below are of the spiral variety.

Home

All the images in this site are © Copyright 2003 by Dean Jacobsen.
Any use of these images without the prior written consent or knowledge of the author is strictly prohibited.
Contact Dean at deanjacobsen@adelphia.net  for more information.