Groups of Galaxies (2) ...

In the Northern Hemisphere, two galaxies of the local group are visible to the naked eye. The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is a great Sb spiral much like our own at a distance of about 3 million light years (900 kpc). To the naked eye it is a faint fuzzy patch that appears, with binoculars, as a lens shaped object. It has two dwarf elliptical satellite galaxies visible through a small telescope. The adjacent image shows M31 and the small elliptical companions M32 (left) and M110 (right). The other galaxy of the local group that is visible to the naked eye is the spiral M33 in Triangulum, at a distance comparable to that of Andromeda. It too is a spiral galaxy, but it is smaller than Andromeda and therefore is harder to see.

The Nearest Galaxy
For some time it was thought that the Large Magellanic Cloud was the galaxy nearest to the Milky Way. However, in 1994, a small dwarf elliptical galaxy called the Sagittarius Dwarf was discovered to be closer than the Magellanic Clouds. The adjacent figure shows this small galaxy as the hazy patch in the center of the image.

This galaxy escaped detection until recently because it is small, faint, spread out, and obscured by intervening stars of the Milky Way (the larger bright spots in the image). It lies at a distance of about 24 kpc, which is less than half of the distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud. Because of its proximity to the Milky Way, it is probably being torn apart by tidal forces.

Some Nearby Groups of Galaxies
Group Name Members Distance (Mpc)
M81 8 3.1
Sculptor 6 1.8
Centaurus 17 3.5
M101 5 7.7
M66 + M96 ~ 10 9.4
NGC 1023 6 9.5
Adapted from An Introduction to Modern Astrophysics, B. W. Carrol and D. A. Ostlie

Other Nearby Groups
Some other nearby groups of galaxies are listed in the adjacent table. All told, there are about 20 small groups of galaxies nearer to us than the Virgo Rich Cluster, which is a large cluster of galaxies lying at a distance of about 15 Mpc that we shall discuss shortly. Most galaxies in the Universe probably occupy small groups and clusters such as the Local Group.