From Atlas of the Universe Mercury, the innermost planet, is never easy to study from Earth. It is small, with a diameter of only 4878 kilometers (3030 miles); it always stays in the same region of the sky as the Sun, and it never comes much within 80 million kilometers (50 million miles) of us.
The second planet from the Sun, clearly visible from the Earth as a bright morning and evening star, its orbit lying between those of Mercury and Earth.
Sixth planet from the Sun, and the second-largest in the Solar System, encircled by bright and easily visible equatorial rings. Viewed through a telescope it is ochre.
The eighth planet from the Sun, the outermost of the four ‘gas giant’ planets; discovered in 1846 as a result of a prediction by Leverrier to explain anomalies in the observed orbit of Uranus.
Astronomy Encyclopedia (M31, NGC 224) One of the two giant spiral galaxies in the local group of galaxies, the other being our Galaxy, the Milky Way. M31 is the nearest spiral to the Milky Way, some 2.4 million l.y. away
Pair of stars moving in orbit around their common centre of mass. Observations show that most stars are binary, or even multiple - for example, the nearest star system to the Sun, Rigil Kent (Alpha Centauri).
From The Columbia Encyclopedia Diffuse gaseous nebula in the constellation Taurus; cataloged as NGC 1952 and M1, the first object recorded in Charles Messier's catalog of nonstellar objects. It is the remnant of a supernova that was observed in 1054 by Chinese and Arab astronomers to be as bright as Venus.
From Collins Dictionary of Astronomy A spherically symmetrical compact cluster of stars, containing from several tens of thousands to maybe a million stars that are thought to share a common origin. An example is the Great Cluster in Hercules. A few globular clusters, such as Omega Centauri, appear to be slightly flattened.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia
Orion Nebula, bright diffuse nebula in the constellation Orion; also known as the Great Nebula of Orion and cataloged as M42 or NGC 1976.
From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia In astronomy, an open star cluster about 400 light years away from Earth in the constellation Taurus, represented as the Seven Sisters of Greek mythology. Its brightest stars (highly luminous, blue-white giants only a few million years old) are visible to the naked eye, but there are many fainter ones.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia Brightest star in the constellation Centaurus and 3d-brightest star in the sky; also known as Rigil Kent or Rigil Kentaurus; 1992 position R.A. 14h39.1m, Dec. -60°49'. It is a yellow main-sequence star of the same spectral class (G2 V) as the sun and of about the same size and mass.
From The Colombia Encyclopedia
The brightest star in the northern sky, apparent magnitude −0.05, also known as α Boötis. It is a yellow giant star of spectral type K2, one of the nearest giants to the Earth at a distance of 11.25 parsecs (2.16 × 1014 mi or 3.47 × 1014 km).
From Astronomy Encyclopedia
A cool and highly luminous star, prominently located in the right shoulder of the constellation Orion and noticeably red in color. Betelgeuse, or α Orionis, is a supergiant star about 130 parsecs (430 light-years) from the Sun. Its spectral type of M2 indicates an effective temperature of approximately 3500 K (5800°F).
From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia Second-magnitude star in Ursa Major, where it marks the middle of the handle of the Plough. Mizar and Alcor, a fourth-magnitude star, form a visual double star.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia Bright star in the constellation Orion; Bayer designation Beta Orionis; 1992 position R.A. 5h14.2m, Dec. -8°13'. A huge, blue supergiant of spectral class B8 Ia, Rigel has an intrinsic brightness about 40,000 times as luminous as that of the sun.
From Collins Dictionary of Astronomy A conspicuous white star, apparently blue in color, that is the brightest star in the constellation Lyra. It was the pole star about 12,000 years ago, at the end of the last Ice Age. Because of precession, it will be the pole star again around ad 14,000.
In the solar system: a small body consisting of a coma, a nucleus and a tail, which is composed mainly of frozen gas, dust and rock and follows an elliptical orbit around the Sun.
From Atlas of the Universe When Messier published his catalog, in 1781, he included nebulae of two types – those which looked as though they were gaseous, and those which gave every impression of being made up of stars.
Celestial source that appears to flash at radio and other wavelengths at regular intervals, ranging from a few seconds to a few thousandths of a second. Pulsars are rapidly rotating neutron stars.