Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Teamfight Tactics (TFT) is an auto battler game developed and published by Riot Games.The game is a spinoff of League of Legends and is based on Dota Auto Chess, where players compete online against seven other opponents by building a team to be the last one standing.
Size (left) and distance (right) of a few well-known galaxies put to scale. There are an estimated 100 billion galaxies in all of the observable universe. [1] On the order of 100,000 galaxies make up the Local Supercluster, and about 51 galaxies are in the Local Group (see list of nearest galaxies for a complete list).
NGC 4567/8, UGC 7776/7, PGC 42064/9, VV 219, [2] KPG 347, [3] Butterfly Galaxies, [4] Siamese Twin Galaxies, Siamese Twins Galaxies, Siamese Twins [5] [NB 1] NGC 4567 and NGC 4568 (nicknamed the Butterfly Galaxies [ 4 ] or Siamese Twins [ NB 1 ] [ 5 ] ) are a set of unbarred spiral galaxies about 60 million light-years away [ 1 ] in the ...
This is actually a collision between two galaxy clusters. The galaxies and the dark matter seems to have separated out into separate dark and light cores. [3] Abell 2142: A collision between two massive, X-ray luminous galaxy clusters. Cl 0024+17 (ClG 0024+16, ZwCl 0024+1652)
The pair of galaxies were found lensed by galaxy cluster CL1358+62 (z = 0.33). This was the first time since 1964 that something other than a quasar held the record for being the most distant object in the universe.
Komberg–Kravtsov–Lukash LQG 5: 430,000,000: Discovered by Boris V. Komberg, Andrey V. Kravstov and Vladimir N. Lukash. [23] [24] Tesch–Engels LQG: 420,000,000: Shapley Supercluster: 400,000,000: First identified by Harlow Shapley as a cloud of galaxies in 1930, it was not identified as a structure until 1989. Komberg–Kravstov–Lukash ...
NGC 4565 is a giant spiral galaxy more luminous than the Andromeda Galaxy. [6] Much speculation exists in literature as to the nature of the central bulge. In the absence of clear-cut dynamical data on the motions of stars in the bulge, the photometric data alone cannot adjudge among various options put forth.
The Phoenix Cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243) is a massive, Abell class type I galaxy cluster located at its namesake, southern constellation of Phoenix.It was initially detected in 2010 during a 2,500 square degree survey of the southern sky using the Sunyaev–Zeldovich effect by the South Pole Telescope collaboration. [5]