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Revision as of 12:50, 10 September 2005 editHurricane Devon (talk | contribs)4,670 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 21:05, 18 October 2005 edit undoJyril (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Rollbackers15,217 edits rem. excessive 'also known as' list, minor tweaks; this is still very much a stub article and could be expanded radicallyNext edit →
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{{ Galaxy | {{ Galaxy |
| name = Whirlpool galaxy | name = Whirlpool Galaxy
| type = Sc | type = Sc
| epoch = J2000.0 | epoch = J2000.0
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| names = NGC 5194, M51}} | names = NGC 5194, M51}}


The '''Whirlpool Galaxy''' (also known as '''Spiral Galaxy M51''', '''Messier Object 51''', '''Messier 51''', '''M51''', or '''NGC 5194''') is a classic ] located in the ]. It was discovered by ] on ], ]. The '''Whirlpool Galaxy''' (also known as '''Messier 51''', '''M51''', or '''NGC 5194''') is a classic ] located in the ]. It was discovered by ] on ], ].


== Info on Whirlpool Galaxy == == Info on Whirlpool Galaxy ==
] ] image of the Whirlpool Galaxy.]]


The Whirpool Galaxy is one of the brightest, most compelling ] in the sky, visible with ]. The spiral galactic structure was first observed in this galaxy, which is the dominant member of the ]. The Whirpool Galaxy is one of the brightest, most compelling ] in the sky, visible with ]. The spiral galactic structure was first observed in this galaxy, which is the dominant member of the ].


Its companion galaxy, ], was discovered in ] by ]. Sometimes M51 is used to refer to the pair of galaxies, in which case the individual galaxies may be referred to as M51A (5194) and M51B (5195). Its companion galaxy, ], was discovered in ] by ]. Sometimes M51 is used to refer to the pair of galaxies, in which case the individual galaxies may be referred to as M51A (NGC 5194) and M51B (NGC 5195).
The galaxy is less than 37 million ]s away from ] — some measurements put the distance at only 15 million. The galaxy is less than 37 million ]s away from ] — some measurements put the distance at only 15 million.


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Revision as of 21:05, 18 October 2005

Galaxies
Morphology
Structure
Active nuclei
Energetic galaxies
Low activity
Interaction
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See also

The Whirlpool Galaxy (also known as Messier 51, M51, or NGC 5194) is a classic spiral galaxy located in the Canes Venatici constellation. It was discovered by Charles Messier on October 13, 1773.

Info on Whirlpool Galaxy

Hubble image of the Whirlpool Galaxy.

The Whirpool Galaxy is one of the brightest, most compelling galaxies in the sky, visible with binoculars. The spiral galactic structure was first observed in this galaxy, which is the dominant member of the M51 group of galaxies.

Its companion galaxy, NGC 5195, was discovered in 1781 by Pierre Méchain. Sometimes M51 is used to refer to the pair of galaxies, in which case the individual galaxies may be referred to as M51A (NGC 5194) and M51B (NGC 5195). The galaxy is less than 37 million light years away from Earth — some measurements put the distance at only 15 million.

In 2005 a supernova was observed in the Whirlpool Galaxy, peaking at apparent magnitude 14.

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