Deep sky

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A deep sky object: the peculiar spiral galaxy ESO 510-G13 in Hydra. Its equatorial dust plane is considerably warped. This galaxy is 170 million light-years from Earth and about 100,000 light-years across.
A deep sky object: the peculiar spiral galaxy ESO 510-G13 in Hydra. Its equatorial dust plane is considerably warped. This galaxy is 170 million light-years from Earth and about 100,000 light-years across.

Deep sky or Deep Sky Object (DSO, for short), which differs from deep space, is a term used by amateur astronomers to describe mostly faint objects outside the solar system like star clusters, nebulae and galaxies. These objects are hundreds to billions of light-years distant.

Nearly all clusters and nebulae are contained within galaxies, and there are a number of galaxies visible to the naked eye. They are, in order of closeness, the Milky Way, the Large Magellanic Cloud (approximately 160,000 light-years away), the Small Magellanic Cloud (about 200,000 light-years away), and the Andromeda Galaxy, (about 2.5 million light-years away).

Types of deep sky objects:

These are classified by the Messier catalogue of 110 objects and the much more comprehensive New General Catalogue which contains nearly 8,000 objects. Many sets of these and other objects from more specialised catalogues such as the Uppsala General Catalogue are used by amateurs as a test of their observing skills and their equipment. The Messier marathons occur at a specific time each year and involve observers trying to spot all 110 objects in one night. A much more demanding test known as Herschell's 400 is designed to tax larger telescopes.

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