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List of Andromeda's satellite galaxies

The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) has satellite galaxies just like the Milky Way. Orbiting M31 are at least 13 dwarf galaxies: the brightest and largest is M110, which can be seen with a basic telescope. The second-brightest and closest one to M31 is M32. The other galaxies are fainter, and were mostly discovered starting from the 1970s.

The Andromeda Galaxy with M110 at upper left and M32 to the right of the core

On January 11, 2006, it was announced that Andromeda Galaxy's faint companion galaxies lie on or close to a single plane running through the Andromeda Galaxy's center. This unexpected distribution is not obviously understood in the context of current models for galaxy formation. The plane of satellite galaxies points toward a nearby group of galaxies (M81 Group), possibly tracing the large-scale distribution of dark matter.

It is unknown whether the Triangulum Galaxy is a satellite of Andromeda.

Table of known satellites edit

Andromeda Galaxy's satellites are listed here by discovery (orbital distance is not known). Andromeda IV is not included in the list, as it was discovered to be roughly 10 times further than Andromeda from the Milky Way in 2014, and therefore a completely unrelated galaxy.

Andromeda Galaxy's satellites
Name Type Distance from Sun
(million ly)
Right Ascension** Declination** Absolute Magnitude[1] Apparent magnitude Mass-to-light ratio 3D distance to M31 (kly) Year
discovered
Notes
M32 dE2 2.48 00h 42m 41.877s +40° 51′ 54.71″ +8.1 1749
M110 dE6 2.69 00h 40m 22.054s +41° 41′ 08.04″ −16.5 +8.5 1773
NGC 185 dE5 2.01 00h 38m 57.523s +48° 20′ 14.86″ +10.1 1787
NGC 147 dE5 2.2 00h 33m 12.131s +48° 30′ 32.82″ +10.5 1829
Andromeda I dSph 2.43 00h 45m 39.264s +38° 02′ 35.17″ −11.8 +13.6 31 ± 6[1] 1970
Andromeda II*** dSph 2.13 01h 16m 28.136s +33° 25′ 50.36″ −12.6 +13.5 13 ± 3[1] 1970
Andromeda III dSph 2.44 00h 35m 31.777s +36° 30′ 04.19″ −10.2 +15.0 19 ± 12[1] 1970
Andromeda V dSph 2.52 01h 10m 16.952s +47° 37′ 40.12″ −9.6 +15.9 78 ± 50[2] 1998
Pegasus Dwarf Spheroidal
(Andromeda VI)
dSph 2.55 23h 51m 46.516s +24° 34′ 55.69″ −11.5 +14.2 12 ± 5[2] 1998
Cassiopeia Dwarf
(Andromeda VII)
dSph 2.49 23h 26m 33.321s +50° 40′ 49.98″ −13.3 +12.9 7.1 ± 2.8[1] 1998
Andromeda VIII dSph 2.7 00h 42m 06s +40° 37′ 00″ +9.1 2003 Tidally disrupting; identification unclear
Andromeda IX dSph 2.5 00h 52m 52.493s +43° 11′ 55.66″ −8.3 +16.2 127.2 2004
Andromeda X dSph 2.9 01h 06m 34.740s +44° 48′ 23.31″ −8.1 +16.1 63 ± 40[1] 332.7 2005
Andromeda XI[3] dSph 00h 46m 20s +33° 48′ 05″ −7.3 2006
Andromeda XII[3] dSph 00h 47m 27s +33° 22′ 29″ −6.4 2006
Andromeda XIII[3] (Pisces III) dSph 00h 51m 49.555s +33° 00′ 31.40″ −6.9 2006
Andromeda XIV[4] (Pisces IV) dSph 00h 41m 35.219s +29° 41′ 45.87″ −8.3 102 ± 71[1] 2007
Andromeda XV[4] dSph 01h 14m 18.7s +38° 07′ 02.9″ −9.4 2007
Andromeda XVI[4] (Pisces V) dSph 2.143[5] 00h 59m 29.843s +32° 22′ 27.96″ −9.2 580.6 2007
Andromeda XVII[4] dSph 00h 37m 07s +44° 19′ 20″ −8.5 313.1 2008
Andromeda XVIII[4] dSph/Sm 00h 02m 15.184s +45° 05′ 19.78″ 515.3 2008
Andromeda XIX[4] dSph 00h 19m 32.1s +35° 02′ 37.1″ −9.3 2008
Andromeda XX[4] dSph 00h 07m 30.530s +35° 07′ 45.94″ −6.3 512.1 2008
Andromeda XXI[4] dSph 23h 54m 47.7s +42° 28′ 15″ −9.9 472.9 2009
Andromeda XXII[4] dSph 00h 27m 40s +28° 05′ 25″ −7.0 910 2009
Andromeda XXIII[4] dIrr 01h 29m 21.944s +38° 43′ 05.97″ 427.3 2011
Andromeda XXIV[4] 01h 18m 30s +46° 21′ 58″ 401.2 2011
Andromeda XXV[4] 00h 30m 08.9s +46° 51′ 07″ 319.6 2011
Andromeda XXVI[4] 00h 23m 45.6s +47° 54′ 58″ 489.2 2011
Andromeda XXVII[4] 00h 37m 27.1s +45° 23′ 13″ 2011 Tidally disrupted[6]
Andromeda XXVIII[7] dSph 22h 32m 41.449s +31° 12′ 59.10″ 2011
Andromeda XXIX[7] dIrr 23h 58m 55.440s +30° 45′ 22.09″ 636 2011
Andromeda XXX (Cassiopeia II)[8] dSph? 00h 36m 34.9s +49° 38′ 48″
Andromeda XXXI (Lacerta I)[8] dSph? 22h 58m 16.3s +41° 17′ 28″ 2013
Andromeda XXXII (Cassiopeia III)[8] dSph? 00h 35m 59.4s +51° 33′ 35″ 2013
Andromeda XXXIII (Perseus I)[8] dSph? 03h 01m 23.6s +40° 59′ 18″ 2013
Tidal Stream Northwest
(Tidal Stream E and F)[9]
00h 20m 00s +46° 00′ 00″ 2009
Tidal Stream Southwest[9] 00h 30m 00s +37° 30′ 00″ 2009
Pegasus V galaxy (Peg V) d 682 kpc (2.22 Mly) 23h 18m 27.8s±0.1 +33° 21′ 32″±3 −6.3 245 kpc (800 kly) 2022 [10][11][12]
Triangulum Galaxy*
(M33)
SA(s)cd 2.59 01h 33m 50.883s +30° 39′ 36.54″ +6.27 1654? It is around 750000 light years from Andromeda.[13] Its relation to Andromeda is uncertain.

* It is uncertain whether it is a companion galaxy of the Andromeda Galaxy.

** RA/DEC values marked in Italics are rough estimates.

*** Martin et al. (2009) gave aliases to several satellite galaxies of the Andromeda Galaxy that are located in Pisces.[14] However, the name Pisces II was later used for a different galaxy that is a satellite of the Milky Way,[15] so it is not used here.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Kalirai, Jason S.; Beaton, Rachael L.; Geha, Marla C.; Gilbert, Karoline M.; Guhathakurta, Puragra; Kirby, Evan N.; Majewski, Steven R.; Ostheimer, James C.; Patterson, Richard J.; Wolf, Joe (2010). "The SPLASH Survey: Internal Kinematics, Chemical Abundances, and Masses of the Andromeda I, II, III, VII, X, and XIV Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies". The Astrophysical Journal. 711 (2): 671–692. arXiv:0911.1998. Bibcode:2010ApJ...711..671K. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/711/2/671. S2CID 43188686.
  2. ^ a b Collins, M. L. M.; Chapman, S. C.; Rich, R. M.; Irwin, M. J.; Peñarrubia, J.; Ibata, R. A.; Arimoto, N.; Brooks, A. M.; Ferguson, A. M. N.; Lewis, G. F.; McConnachie, A. W.; Venn, K. (2011). "The scatter about the 'Universal' dwarf spheroidal mass profile: A kinematic study of the M31 satellites and V and VI". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 417 (2): 1170. arXiv:1103.2121. Bibcode:2011MNRAS.417.1170C. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.19342.x. S2CID 6345715.
  3. ^ a b c Martin, N. F.; Ibata, R. A.; Irwin, M. J.; Chapman, S.; Lewis, G. F.; Ferguson, A. M. N.; Tanvir, N.; McConnachie, A. W. (2006). "Discovery and analysis of three faint dwarf galaxies and a globular cluster in the outer halo of the Andromeda galaxy". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 371 (4): 1983–1991. arXiv:astro-ph/0607472. Bibcode:2006MNRAS.371.1983M. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10823.x. S2CID 20171599.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Discovery of the Local Group Galaxies
  5. ^ Monelli, Matteo; Martínez-Vázquez, Clara E.; Bernard, Edouard J.; Gallart, Carme; Skillman, Evan D.; Weisz, Daniel R.; Dolphin, Andrew E.; Hidalgo, Sebastian L.; Cole, Andrew A.; Martin, Nicolas F.; Aparicio, Antonio; Cassisi, Santi; Boylan-Kolchin, Michael; Mayer, Lucio; McConnachie, Alan; McQuinn, Kristen B. W.; Navarro, Julio F. (2016). "The Islands Project. I. Andromeda Xvi, an Extremely Low Mass Galaxy Not Quenched by Reionization". The Astrophysical Journal. 819 (2): 147. arXiv:1603.00625. Bibcode:2016ApJ...819..147M. doi:10.3847/0004-637X/819/2/147. S2CID 32263075.
  6. ^ Preston, Janet; Collins, Michelle L. M.; Ibata, Rodrigo A.; Tollerud, Erik J.; Rich, R. Michael; Bonaca, Ana; McConnachie, Alan W.; Mackey, Dougal; Lewis, Geraint F.; Martin, Nicolas F.; Peñarrubia, Jorge; Chapman, Scott C.; Delorme, Maxime (2019). "A dwarf disrupting - Andromeda XXVII and the North West Stream". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 490 (2): 2905–2917. arXiv:1909.09661. Bibcode:2019MNRAS.490.2905P. doi:10.1093/mnras/stz2529.
  7. ^ a b Moore, Nicole Casal (7 Nov 2011), "Newly found dwarf galaxies could help reveal the nature of dark matter", News Service, University of Michigan, retrieved 10 Dec 2011 (reprinted in R&D Magazine)
  8. ^ a b c d McConnachie, Alan W. (2012). "The observed properties of dwarf galaxies in and around the Local Group". The Astronomical Journal. 144 (1): 4. arXiv:1204.1562. Bibcode:2012AJ....144....4M. doi:10.1088/0004-6256/144/1/4. S2CID 118515618.
  9. ^ a b New tidal streams found in Andromeda reveal history of galactic mergers
  10. ^ "Pegasus V: New Ultra-Faint Dwarf Galaxy Spotted in Outskirts of Andromeda". Sci-News. 1 July 2022.
  11. ^ University of Surrey (30 June 2022). "New fossil galaxy discovery could answer important questions about the history of the universe". EurkAlert!. AAAS.
  12. ^ Collins, Michelle L. M.; Charles, Emily J. E.; Martínez-Delgado, David; Monelli, Matteo; Karim, Noushin; Donatiello, Giuseppe; Tollerud, Erik J.; Boschin, Walter (2022). "Pegasus V/Andromeda XXXIV–a newly discovered ultrafaint dwarf galaxy on the outskirts of Andromeda". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters. 515 (1): L72–L77. arXiv:2204.09068. Bibcode:2022MNRAS.515L..72C. doi:10.1093/mnrasl/slac063.
  13. ^ "Messier Object 33". www.messier.seds.org. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  14. ^ Martin, Nicolas F.; McConnachie, Alan W.; Irwin, Mike; Widrow, Lawrence M.; Ferguson, Annette M. N.; Ibata, Rodrigo A.; Dubinski, John; Babul, Arif; et al. (1 November 2009). "PAndAS' CUBS: Discovery of Two New Dwarf Galaxies in the Surroundings of the Andromeda and Triangulum Galaxies". The Astrophysical Journal. 705 (1): 758–765. arXiv:0909.0399. Bibcode:2009ApJ...705..758M. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/705/1/758. S2CID 15277245.
  15. ^ Belokurov, V.; Walker, M. G.; Evans, N. W.; Gilmore, G.; Irwin, M. J.; Just, D.; Koposov, S.; Mateo, M.; Olszewski, E.; Watkins, L.; Wyrzykowski, L. (2010). "Big Fish, Little Fish: Two New Ultra-Faint Satellites of the Milky Way". The Astrophysical Journal. 712 (1): L103–L106. arXiv:1002.0504. Bibcode:2010ApJ...712L.103B. doi:10.1088/2041-8205/712/1/L103. S2CID 29195107.

External links edit

  • Strange Setup: Andromeda's Satellite Galaxies All Lined Up

list, andromeda, satellite, galaxies, andromeda, galaxy, satellite, galaxies, just, like, milky, orbiting, least, dwarf, galaxies, brightest, largest, m110, which, seen, with, basic, telescope, second, brightest, closest, other, galaxies, fainter, were, mostly. The Andromeda Galaxy M31 has satellite galaxies just like the Milky Way Orbiting M31 are at least 13 dwarf galaxies the brightest and largest is M110 which can be seen with a basic telescope The second brightest and closest one to M31 is M32 The other galaxies are fainter and were mostly discovered starting from the 1970s The Andromeda Galaxy with M110 at upper left and M32 to the right of the coreOn January 11 2006 it was announced that Andromeda Galaxy s faint companion galaxies lie on or close to a single plane running through the Andromeda Galaxy s center This unexpected distribution is not obviously understood in the context of current models for galaxy formation The plane of satellite galaxies points toward a nearby group of galaxies M81 Group possibly tracing the large scale distribution of dark matter It is unknown whether the Triangulum Galaxy is a satellite of Andromeda Contents 1 Table of known satellites 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksTable of known satellites editAndromeda Galaxy s satellites are listed here by discovery orbital distance is not known Andromeda IV is not included in the list as it was discovered to be roughly 10 times further than Andromeda from the Milky Way in 2014 and therefore a completely unrelated galaxy Andromeda Galaxy s satellites Name Type Distance from Sun million ly Right Ascension Declination Absolute Magnitude 1 Apparent magnitude Mass to light ratio 3D distance to M31 kly Yeardiscovered NotesM32 dE2 2 48 00h 42m 41 877s 40 51 54 71 8 1 1749M110 dE6 2 69 00h 40m 22 054s 41 41 08 04 16 5 8 5 1773NGC 185 dE5 2 01 00h 38m 57 523s 48 20 14 86 10 1 1787NGC 147 dE5 2 2 00h 33m 12 131s 48 30 32 82 10 5 1829Andromeda I dSph 2 43 00h 45m 39 264s 38 02 35 17 11 8 13 6 31 6 1 1970Andromeda II dSph 2 13 01h 16m 28 136s 33 25 50 36 12 6 13 5 13 3 1 1970Andromeda III dSph 2 44 00h 35m 31 777s 36 30 04 19 10 2 15 0 19 12 1 1970Andromeda V dSph 2 52 01h 10m 16 952s 47 37 40 12 9 6 15 9 78 50 2 1998Pegasus Dwarf Spheroidal Andromeda VI dSph 2 55 23h 51m 46 516s 24 34 55 69 11 5 14 2 12 5 2 1998Cassiopeia Dwarf Andromeda VII dSph 2 49 23h 26m 33 321s 50 40 49 98 13 3 12 9 7 1 2 8 1 1998Andromeda VIII dSph 2 7 00h 42m 06s 40 37 00 9 1 2003 Tidally disrupting identification unclearAndromeda IX dSph 2 5 00h 52m 52 493s 43 11 55 66 8 3 16 2 127 2 2004Andromeda X dSph 2 9 01h 06m 34 740s 44 48 23 31 8 1 16 1 63 40 1 332 7 2005Andromeda XI 3 dSph 00h 46m 20s 33 48 05 7 3 2006Andromeda XII 3 dSph 00h 47m 27s 33 22 29 6 4 2006Andromeda XIII 3 Pisces III dSph 00h 51m 49 555s 33 00 31 40 6 9 2006Andromeda XIV 4 Pisces IV dSph 00h 41m 35 219s 29 41 45 87 8 3 102 71 1 2007Andromeda XV 4 dSph 01h 14m 18 7s 38 07 02 9 9 4 2007Andromeda XVI 4 Pisces V dSph 2 143 5 00h 59m 29 843s 32 22 27 96 9 2 580 6 2007Andromeda XVII 4 dSph 00h 37m 07s 44 19 20 8 5 313 1 2008Andromeda XVIII 4 dSph Sm 00h 02m 15 184s 45 05 19 78 515 3 2008Andromeda XIX 4 dSph 00h 19m 32 1s 35 02 37 1 9 3 2008Andromeda XX 4 dSph 00h 07m 30 530s 35 07 45 94 6 3 512 1 2008Andromeda XXI 4 dSph 23h 54m 47 7s 42 28 15 9 9 472 9 2009Andromeda XXII 4 dSph 00h 27m 40s 28 05 25 7 0 910 2009Andromeda XXIII 4 dIrr 01h 29m 21 944s 38 43 05 97 427 3 2011Andromeda XXIV 4 01h 18m 30s 46 21 58 401 2 2011Andromeda XXV 4 00h 30m 08 9s 46 51 07 319 6 2011Andromeda XXVI 4 00h 23m 45 6s 47 54 58 489 2 2011Andromeda XXVII 4 00h 37m 27 1s 45 23 13 2011 Tidally disrupted 6 Andromeda XXVIII 7 dSph 22h 32m 41 449s 31 12 59 10 2011Andromeda XXIX 7 dIrr 23h 58m 55 440s 30 45 22 09 636 2011Andromeda XXX Cassiopeia II 8 dSph 00h 36m 34 9s 49 38 48 Andromeda XXXI Lacerta I 8 dSph 22h 58m 16 3s 41 17 28 2013Andromeda XXXII Cassiopeia III 8 dSph 00h 35m 59 4s 51 33 35 2013Andromeda XXXIII Perseus I 8 dSph 03h 01m 23 6s 40 59 18 2013Tidal Stream Northwest Tidal Stream E and F 9 00h 20m 00s 46 00 00 2009Tidal Stream Southwest 9 00h 30m 00s 37 30 00 2009Pegasus V galaxy Peg V d 682 kpc 2 22 Mly 23h 18m 27 8s 0 1 33 21 32 3 6 3 245 kpc 800 kly 2022 10 11 12 Triangulum Galaxy M33 SA s cd 2 59 01h 33m 50 883s 30 39 36 54 6 27 1654 It is around 750000 light years from Andromeda 13 Its relation to Andromeda is uncertain It is uncertain whether it is a companion galaxy of the Andromeda Galaxy RA DEC values marked in Italics are rough estimates Martin et al 2009 gave aliases to several satellite galaxies of the Andromeda Galaxy that are located in Pisces 14 However the name Pisces II was later used for a different galaxy that is a satellite of the Milky Way 15 so it is not used here See also editSatellite galaxies of the Milky Way List of nearest galaxies Local GroupReferences edit a b c d e f g Kalirai Jason S Beaton Rachael L Geha Marla C Gilbert Karoline M Guhathakurta Puragra Kirby Evan N Majewski Steven R Ostheimer James C Patterson Richard J Wolf Joe 2010 The SPLASH Survey Internal Kinematics Chemical Abundances and Masses of the Andromeda I II III VII X and XIV Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies The Astrophysical Journal 711 2 671 692 arXiv 0911 1998 Bibcode 2010ApJ 711 671K doi 10 1088 0004 637X 711 2 671 S2CID 43188686 a b Collins M L M Chapman S C Rich R M Irwin M J Penarrubia J Ibata R A Arimoto N Brooks A M Ferguson A M N Lewis G F McConnachie A W Venn K 2011 The scatter about the Universal dwarf spheroidal mass profile A kinematic study of the M31 satellites and V and VI Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 417 2 1170 arXiv 1103 2121 Bibcode 2011MNRAS 417 1170C doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2011 19342 x S2CID 6345715 a b c Martin N F Ibata R A Irwin M J Chapman S Lewis G F Ferguson A M N Tanvir N McConnachie A W 2006 Discovery and analysis of three faint dwarf galaxies and a globular cluster in the outer halo of the Andromeda galaxy Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 371 4 1983 1991 arXiv astro ph 0607472 Bibcode 2006MNRAS 371 1983M doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2006 10823 x S2CID 20171599 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Discovery of the Local Group Galaxies Monelli Matteo Martinez Vazquez Clara E Bernard Edouard J Gallart Carme Skillman Evan D Weisz Daniel R Dolphin Andrew E Hidalgo Sebastian L Cole Andrew A Martin Nicolas F Aparicio Antonio Cassisi Santi Boylan Kolchin Michael Mayer Lucio McConnachie Alan McQuinn Kristen B W Navarro Julio F 2016 The Islands Project I Andromeda Xvi an Extremely Low Mass Galaxy Not Quenched by Reionization The Astrophysical Journal 819 2 147 arXiv 1603 00625 Bibcode 2016ApJ 819 147M doi 10 3847 0004 637X 819 2 147 S2CID 32263075 Preston Janet Collins Michelle L M Ibata Rodrigo A Tollerud Erik J Rich R Michael Bonaca Ana McConnachie Alan W Mackey Dougal Lewis Geraint F Martin Nicolas F Penarrubia Jorge Chapman Scott C Delorme Maxime 2019 A dwarf disrupting Andromeda XXVII and the North West Stream Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 490 2 2905 2917 arXiv 1909 09661 Bibcode 2019MNRAS 490 2905P doi 10 1093 mnras stz2529 a b Moore Nicole Casal 7 Nov 2011 Newly found dwarf galaxies could help reveal the nature of dark matter News Service University of Michigan retrieved 10 Dec 2011 reprinted in R amp D Magazine a b c d McConnachie Alan W 2012 The observed properties of dwarf galaxies in and around the Local Group The Astronomical Journal 144 1 4 arXiv 1204 1562 Bibcode 2012AJ 144 4M doi 10 1088 0004 6256 144 1 4 S2CID 118515618 a b New tidal streams found in Andromeda reveal history of galactic mergers Pegasus V New Ultra Faint Dwarf Galaxy Spotted in Outskirts of Andromeda Sci News 1 July 2022 University of Surrey 30 June 2022 New fossil galaxy discovery could answer important questions about the history of the universe EurkAlert AAAS Collins Michelle L M Charles Emily J E Martinez Delgado David Monelli Matteo Karim Noushin Donatiello Giuseppe Tollerud Erik J Boschin Walter 2022 Pegasus V Andromeda XXXIV a newly discovered ultrafaint dwarf galaxy on the outskirts of Andromeda Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters 515 1 L72 L77 arXiv 2204 09068 Bibcode 2022MNRAS 515L 72C doi 10 1093 mnrasl slac063 Messier Object 33 www messier seds org Retrieved 2021 05 21 Martin Nicolas F McConnachie Alan W Irwin Mike Widrow Lawrence M Ferguson Annette M N Ibata Rodrigo A Dubinski John Babul Arif et al 1 November 2009 PAndAS CUBS Discovery of Two New Dwarf Galaxies in the Surroundings of the Andromeda and Triangulum Galaxies The Astrophysical Journal 705 1 758 765 arXiv 0909 0399 Bibcode 2009ApJ 705 758M doi 10 1088 0004 637X 705 1 758 S2CID 15277245 Belokurov V Walker M G Evans N W Gilmore G Irwin M J Just D Koposov S Mateo M Olszewski E Watkins L Wyrzykowski L 2010 Big Fish Little Fish Two New Ultra Faint Satellites of the Milky Way The Astrophysical Journal 712 1 L103 L106 arXiv 1002 0504 Bibcode 2010ApJ 712L 103B doi 10 1088 2041 8205 712 1 L103 S2CID 29195107 External links editAndromeda s thin sheet of satellites Dark matter filiments or galaxtic cannibalism Strange Setup Andromeda s Satellite Galaxies All Lined Up Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Andromeda 27s satellite galaxies amp oldid 1193272624, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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