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galaxies

Galaxies are gravitationally bound systems consisting of stars, stellar remnants, interstellar gas and dust, and dark matter. They range from dwarfs with millions of stars to giants with trillions, spanning tens of thousands of light-years across. The observable content is embedded in a dark matter halo.

The main classifications are elliptical (smooth, ellipsoidal), spiral (flattened disks with spiral arms, often with a

Galaxies contain stars of various ages, giant molecular clouds, ionized gas, dust, and dark matter. Spiral galaxies

They form from fluctuations in the early universe, growing via accretion of gas and mergers with other

The Milky Way is a barred spiral in the Local Group, which also includes Andromeda and Triangulum.

central
bulge),
and
irregular
(no
distinct
shape).
Lenticular
(S0)
sits
between
spirals
and
ellipticals.
Many
spirals
host
central
bar
structures.
The
Hubble
sequence
organizes
these
types.
show
star-forming
regions
in
arms;
ellipticals
host
older
populations.
Central
regions
often
harbor
supermassive
black
holes
whose
masses
correlate
with
bulge
properties.
Most
galaxies
reside
in
dark
matter
halos;
rotation
curves
reveal
dark
matter
presence.
galaxies.
Interactions
can
trigger
star
formation,
distort
shapes,
or
lead
to
mergers
that
build
larger
systems.
Galaxy
evolution
is
influenced
by
environment,
including
group
and
cluster
membership,
where
interactions
are
frequent.
Observationally,
distances
and
motions
are
measured
with
redshift,
standard
candles,
and
spectroscopy
across
radio,
optical,
and
infrared
wavelengths.
The
study
of
galaxies
informs
cosmology,
star
formation,
and
dark
matter
properties.