St. Nicholas/Volume 40/Number 5/Nature and Science/Andromeda
The great nebula in Andromeda
Photographed through a forty-inch refractor telescope. Exposure four hours.
The great nebula in Andromeda
Its nature was long a baffling subject, even after the spectroscope was applied to its study, because of the extreme difficulty of the observations. But the spectroscope finally prevailed, and we now look upon it as a magnificent system of stars, a universe possibly on the plan of our own stellar system, and at an enormous distance from us. Much has yet to be learned concerning its nature before we can decide definitely on its make-up and real magnitude. It seems definitely proved, however, that it is not a great mass of gas like the great nebula of Orion.
Edward Emerson Barnard,
Astronomer of the Yerkes Observatory,
University of Chicago.