Gold Barz
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To form, is it one of the oldest?
The currently best estimate of the age of the Universe, as deduced, e.g., from measurements of the Cosmic Microwave Background, is 13,700 million years. The new observations thus indicate that the first generation of stars in the Milky Way galaxy formed soon after the end of the ~200 million-year long "Dark Ages" that succeeded the Big Bang.
Most of the galaxies we know are elliptical in shape. The largest of these elliptical galaxies may contain as many as 10 trillion stars (10 trillion solar masses) and may be as large as 100,000 parsecs in diameter. (This is comparable to the size of our galaxy - including the entire disk of our galaxy - but with about 100 times more stars. No wonder they are so bright!) Such huge galaxies are called Giant Ellipticals (an example is shown above). They are rare but spectacular. Most of the ellipticals are Dwarf Ellipticals, which have approximately a few million solar masses and diameters of about 2000 parsecs. They are low surface brightness objects. Dwarf Ellipticals generally are found in galaxy clusters or near large galaxies. from the Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland
Astronuc said:Spirals are not the most common type of galaxy.