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Asteroid Ida with its own moon Mimas, a natural satellite of Saturn
File:C2014 Q2.jpgPlanet Jupiter, a gas giant
The Sun, a G-type star Star Sirius A with white dwarf companion Sirius B File:Crab Nebula.jpg
Black hole (artist's animation)Vela pulsar, a rotating neutron star
Globular star clusterPleiades, an open star cluster
The Whirlpool galaxyAbel 2744, Galaxy cluster
The Hubble Ultra-Deep Field 2014 image with an estimated 10,000 galaxiesMap of galaxy superclusters and filaments
Selection of astronomical bodies and objects

An astronomical object or celestial object is a naturally occurring physical entity, association, or structure that exists in the observable universe.[1] In astronomy, the terms object and body are often used interchangeably. However, an astronomical body or celestial body is a single, tightly bound, contiguous entity, while an astronomical or celestial object is a complex, less cohesively bound structure, which may consist of multiple bodies or even other objects with substructures.

Examples of astronomical objects include planetary systems, star clusters, nebulae, and galaxies, while asteroids, moons, planets, and stars are astronomical bodies. A comet may be identified as both body and object: It is a body when referring to the frozen nucleus of ice and dust, and an object when describing the entire comet with its diffuse coma and tail.

Galaxy and larger[]

The universe can be viewed as having a hierarchical structure.[2] At the largest scales, the fundamental component of assembly is the galaxy. Galaxies are organized into groups and clusters, often within larger superclusters, that are strung along great filaments between nearly empty voids, forming a web that spans the observable universe.[3]

The universe has a variety of morphologies, with irregular, elliptical and disk-like shapes, depending on their formation and evolutionary histories, including interaction with other galaxies, which may lead to a merger.[4] Disc galaxies encompass lenticular and spiral galaxies with features, such as spiral arms and a distinct halo. At the core, most galaxies have a supermassive black hole, which may result in an active galactic nucleus. Galaxies can also have satellites in the form of dwarf galaxies and globular clusters.[5]

Within a galaxy[]

The constituents of a galaxy are formed out of gaseous matter that assembles through gravitational self-attraction in a hierarchical manner. At this level, the resulting fundamental components are the stars, which are typically assembled in clusters from the various condensing nebulae.[6] The great variety of stellar forms are determined almost entirely by the mass, composition and evolutionary state of these stars. Stars may be found in multi-star systems that orbit about each other in a hierarchical organization. A planetary system and various minor objects such as asteroids, comets and debris, can form in a hierarchical process of accretion from the protoplanetary disks that surrounds newly formed stars.

The various distinctive types of stars are shown by the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram (H–R diagram)—a plot of absolute stellar luminosity versus surface temperature. Each star follows an evolutionary track across this diagram. If this track takes the star through a region containing an intrinsic variable type, then its physical properties can cause it to become a variable star. An example of this is the instability strip, a region of the H-R diagram that includes Delta Scuti, RR Lyrae and Cepheid variables.[7] Depending on the initial mass of the star and the presence or absence of a companion, a star may spend the last part of its life as a compact object; either a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole.

Categories by location[]

The table below lists the general categories of bodies and objects by their location or structure.

Solar bodies Extrasolar
Simple bodies Compound objects Extended objects
  • Giant planet
    • Gas giant
    • Ice giant
  • Heliosphere
  • Oort cloud
  • Meteoroid
    • Micrometeoroid
  • Meteor
    • Bolide
  • Moons
  • Minor planets (see below)
    • Asteroids
    • Dwarf planets
    • Moons
    • Binaries
    • Synestia (hypothet.)
  • Planets (see below)
    • Ring system
  • Trans-Neptunian objects
  • Small Solar System body
    • Comets
    • Planetesimal
    • Contact binary
  • Sun
Planets
Dwarf planets
  • Plutomoons
  • ErisDysnomia
  • Ceres
  • Makemakemoon
  • Haumeamoons
  • Others
Minor planets
  • Vulcanoids
  • Apoheles
  • Near-Earth objects
    • PHO
    • Arjunas
    • Atens
    • Apollos
    • Amors
  • Mars-crossers
  • Asteroid belt (families)
    • Alindas
    • Cybeles
    • Eos
    • Floras
    • Hildas
    • Hungarias
    • Hygieas
    • Koronis
    • Marias
    • Nysas
    • Pallas
    • Phocaeas
    • Themis
    • Vesta
  • Trojans
    • Earth
    • Mars
    • Jupiter
    • Uranus
    • Neptune
  • Centaurs
    • Damocloids
  • Kuiper belt objects
    • Classical KBOs
    • Resonant TNOs
      • Plutinos (2:3)
      • Twotinos (1:2)
  • Scattered disc objects
    • Detached objects
  • Sednoid
Exoplanets
  • Chthonian (theoret.)
  • Earth analog
  • Eccentric Jupiter
  • Hot Jupiter
  • Hot Neptune
  • Rogue planet
  • Ocean (theoret.)
  • Pulsar planet
  • Super-Earth
  • Trojan (theoret.)
Brown dwarfs
  • Types
    • M  · L  · T  · Y
  • Sub-brown dwarfs
Stars (see sections below)
  • Stellar classification
  • Stellar population III, II, I
  • Peculiar star
  • Stellar evolution
  • Variable star
  • Compact star
By luminosity / evolution
  • Protostar
  • Young stellar object
  • Pre-main-sequence
  • Main sequence
  • Subdwarfs
  • Subgiants
  • Giants
    • Red / Blue
  • Bright giants
  • Supergiants
    • Red / Blue
  • Hypergiants
  • Quasi-star (hypothet.)
  • Compact stars (see below)
Compact stars
  • Black hole
  • Neutron star
    • Magnetar
    • Pulsar
    • Thorne–Żytkow object (hypothet.)
  • Preon star (hypothet.)
  • Quark star (hypothet.)
  • White dwarf
    • Black dwarf (theoret.)
By peculiar stars
  • A-type
    • Peculiar  · Metallic
  • Barium
  • Blue straggler
  • Carbon
  • P Cygni
  • S-type
  • Shell
  • Wolf–Rayet
VariablesExtrinsic
  • Rotating
    • Alpha2 CVn
    • Ellipsoidal
  • Eclipsing binaries
    • Algol
    • Beta Lyrae
    • W Ursae Majoris
VariablesIntrinsic
  • Pulsating
    • Cepheids
    • W Virginis
    • Delta Scuti
    • RR Lyrae
    • Mira
    • Semiregular
    • Irregular
    • Beta Cephei
    • Alpha Cygni
    • RV Tauri
  • Eruptive variables
    • Flare stars
    • T Tauri
    • FU Orionis
    • RCr Borealis
    • Luminous blue
  • Cataclysmic
By spectral types
  • O (blue)
  • B (blue-white)
  • A (white)
  • F (yellow-white)
  • G (yellow)
  • K (orange)
  • M (red)
Systems
Binary stars
  • By observation
    • Optical
    • Visual
    • Astrometric
    • Spectroscopic
    • Eclipsing
  • Close binaries
    • Detached
    • Semidetached
    • Contact
  • X-ray
    • Burster
Stellar groupings
  • Star cluster
    • Stellar association
    • Open
    • Globular
    • Hypercompact
  • Constellation
  • Asterism
Galaxies
  • Galaxies in general
  • Group and cluster
  • Supercluster
  • By component
    • Bulge
    • Spiral arm
    • Thin disk
    • Thick disk
    • Halo
    • Corona
  • By morphology
    • Spiral
    • Barred spiral
    • Lenticular
    • Elliptical
    • Ring
    • Irregular
  • By size
    • Brightest cluster
    • Giant elliptical
    • Dwarf
  • By type
  • Starburst
  • Dark
  • Active
    • Radio
    • Seyfert
    • Quasar
      • Blazar
Discs and media
  • Interplanetary
    • Dust cloud
    • Medium
    • Magnetic field
  • Stellar disc
    • Accretion
    • Circumstellar
      • Protoplanetary
      • Debris
  • Interstellar
    • Cloud
    • Medium
  • Intergalactic
    • Dust
    • Medium
Nebulae
  • Emission
    • Planetary
    • Supernova remnant
    • Plerion
    • H II region
  • Reflection
  • Dark nebulae
    • Molecular cloud
    • Bok globule
    • Proplyd
  • H I region
Cosmic scale
  • CMB
  • Cosmic string (hypothet.)
  • Dark matter (hypothet.)
    • MACHO
    • WIMP
  • Domain wall (hypothet.)
  • Dust
  • Filament
  • Void

See also[]

  • List of light sources
  • List of Solar System objects
  • List of Solar System objects by size
  • Lists of astronomical objects

References[]

  1. Task Group on Astronomical Designations from IAU Commission 5 (April 2008). "Naming Astronomical Objects". International Astronomical Union (IAU). Archived from the original on 2 August 2010. Retrieved 4 July 2010. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. Narlikar, Jayant V. (1996). Elements of Cosmology. Universities Press. ISBN 81-7371-043-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=uZgbMUypq_oC&pg=PA4. 
  3. Smolin, Lee (1998). The life of the cosmos. Oxford University Press US. p. 35. ISBN 0-19-512664-5. 
  4. Buta, Ronald James; Corwin, Harold G.; Odewahn, Stephen C. (2007). The de Vaucouleurs atlas of galaxies. Cambridge University Press. p. 301. ISBN 0-521-82048-0. 
  5. Astronomical Objects for Southern Telescopes. ISBN 0521318874. https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0521318874. Retrieved 13 February 2017. 
  6. Elmegreen, Bruce G. (January 2010). "The nature and nurture of star clusters". Star clusters: basic galactic building blocks throughout time and space, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, IAU Symposium. Vol. . {{cite conference}}: booktitle
  7. Hansen, Carl J.; Kawaler, Steven D.; Trimble, Virginia (2004). Stellar interiors: physical principles, structure, and evolution. Astronomy and astrophysics library (2nd ed.). Springer. p. 86. ISBN 0-387-20089-4. 

External links[]