Astronomical object
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
An astronomical object is something natural that exists in space. These objects can be single pieces, like planets or stars, or they can be groups of many pieces, like star clusters or galaxies. In simple words, an astronomical object is anything you can find floating out in the universe.
Some examples of astronomical objects include planets, stars, moons, asteroids, comets, and even beautiful clouds of gas and dust called nebulae. These objects can be alone or part of bigger groups, like planets orbiting a star or many stars grouped together in a galaxy.
Astronomers, who are scientists who study space, use telescopes to look at these objects. They learn how they formed, how they move, and what they are made of. Understanding astronomical objects helps us know more about our place in the universe and how it all works together.
History
Further information: History of astronomy
See also: Scientific Revolution and Copernican Revolution
According to NASA astrophysicists, space objects started forming about 13.6 billion years ago, not long after the Big Bang. Over time, gravity brought light together to make the first stars and galaxies.
People have watched stars, planets, nebulae, asteroids, and comets for thousands of years. Ancient cultures thought these were deities. They used the movements of these objects to travel, know the seasons, and decide when to plant crops. During the Middle Ages, scientists in the Middle East kept records about stars and nebulae and made better calendars. In Europe, scientists built tools to study space and shared their knowledge in universities.
During the Scientific Revolution, Nicolaus Copernicus's heliocentric model showed that Earth and the planets go around the Sun in the center of the Solar System. Johannes Kepler discovered rules about how planets move. Galileo Galilei used telescopes to see the moons of Jupiter, the phases of Venus, craters on the Moon, and spots on the Sun. Later, scientists used new tools to learn more about stars and other objects in space.
Galaxy and larger
The universe is organized in a special way. The biggest parts are called galaxies. Galaxies group together into groups and clusters, and these clusters are part of even bigger structures called superclusters. These superclusters form lines called filaments with big empty areas called voids in between.
Galaxies come in many shapes. They can be irregular, elliptical, or disk-like. Their shapes depend on how they formed and changed over time. Disk galaxies include lenticular and spiral galaxies, which have features like spiral arms and a bright area called a halo. Most galaxies have a very large black hole at their center. Smaller galaxies called dwarf galaxies and groups of stars known as globular clusters can orbit around larger galaxies.
Within a galaxy
Stars are bright objects made from clouds of gas pulled together by gravity. They often group together and can have different shapes and sizes. Some stars orbit each other, and planets, asteroids, and comets can form around new stars.
Stars change in predictable ways, which we can see in a special chart called the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram. Some stars can become unstable and change in brightness. When stars end their lives, they can leave behind glowing clouds of gas or, in big explosions, leave behind dense objects like white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes.
Shape
Further information: Spherical Earth § Cause
See also: Equatorial bulge and Hydrostatic equilibrium § Planetary geology
The IAU definitions of planet and dwarf planet say that a body orbiting the Sun must be round. This happens because of its own gravity. This round shape is called hydrostatic equilibrium. We see this round shape on small rocky planets like Mars and big gas planets like Jupiter.
Smaller bodies that orbit the Sun and are not round are called small Solar System bodies (SSSBs). These can look very lumpy because they are made from dust and rocks that stuck together. Some SSSBs are just groups of small rocks held together by gravity, while others are almost round but not quite. One example is the small Solar System body 4 Vesta.
Stars like our Sun are also round because of gravity acting on their hot, flowing plasma, which is like a fluid. The heat from stellar fusion in stars is very strong.
Categories by location
See also: Lists of astronomical objects
See also: List of Solar System objects by size
The table below shows the main groups of objects and bodies by where they are found or how they are arranged.
| Solar bodies | Extrasolar | Observable universe | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simple bodies | Compound objects | Extended objects | ||
Planets Dwarf planets Minor planets Vulcanoids (hypothet.) Kuiper belt objects Scattered disc objects | Chthonian (theoret.) Ocean (theoret.) Tidally locked planet Eyeball planet (theoret.) Toroidal planet (theoret.) Trojan (theoret.) Stars (see sections below) Stellar population III, II, I By luminosity / evolution Quasi-star (hypothet.) Compact stars (see below) Exotic star (hypothet.) Iron star (hypothet.) Planck star (hypothet.) Preon star (hypothet.) Quark star (hypothet.) Strange star (hypothet.) White dwarf Black dwarf (theoret.) | Systems By observation Close binaries Stellar groupings Galaxies | Discs and media Interplanetary Stellar disc Cosmic scale | Logarithmic representation of the observable universe with the notable astronomical objects known today. From down to up the celestial bodies are arranged according to their proximity to the Earth. Infographic listing 210 notable astronomical objects marked on a central logarithmic map of the observable universe. A small view and some distinguishing features for each astronomical object are included. |
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