Double the Cosmos!! / June /July 2021 Streichfett Sessions

Image Credit: ESA/NASA/Hubble

Image Credit: ESA/NASA/Hubble

Image Credit: Nasa

Image Credit: Nasa


Streichfett Sessions Installment 8 & 9

June & July 2021

The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way.At a distance of around 50 kiloparsecs (≈160,000 light-years), the LMC is the second or third closest galaxy to the Milky Way, after the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal (~16 kpc) and the possible dwarf irregular galaxy known as the Canis Major Overdensity. The LMC is classified as a Magellanic spiral. It contains a stellar bar that is geometrically off center, suggesting that it was a barred dwarf spiral galaxy before its spiral arms were disrupted, likely by tidal interactions from the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) and the Milky Way's gravity. The Milky Way and the LMC are predicted to collide in approximately 2.4 billion years.-wikipedia

R Aquarii (R Aqr) is a variable star in the constellation Aquarius.

R Aquarii is a symbiotic star believed to contain a white dwarf and a Mira-type variable in a binary system. The orbital period is approximately 44 years. The main Mira-type star is a red giant, and varies in brightness by a factor of several hundred and with a period of slightly more than a year; this variability was discovered by Karl Ludwig Harding in 1810. It has a distance of about 200 parsec, and is one of the nearest symbiotic stars and a well-known jet source. The nebula around R Aquarii is also known as Cederblad 211. It is possible that the nebula is the remnant of a nova-like outburst, which may have been observed by Japanese astronomers, in the year 930 AD. It is reasonably bright but small and dominated by its central star. Visual observations are difficult and rare. The central region of the jet shows an ejection that took place around 190 years ago, as well as much younger structures. -wikipedia




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