Annex: Astronomical objects

format_list_bulleted Contenido keyboard_arrow_down
ImprimirCitar

Below is a table listing the general categories of astronomical objects, and next to it is their location or structure.

Solar system Extraordinary objects
Simple objects Composite objects Extended objects
Solar system
  • Giant Planet
    • Gaseous giant
    • Gigante ice cream
  • Heliosfera
  • Oort Cloud
  • Meteoroid
    • Micrometeoroids
  • Meteors
    • Bags
  • Satellites
  • Minor planets (see below)
    • Asteroides
    • Dwarf planets
    • asteroid satellites
    • Binaries
    • Sinesia (hypotic)
  • Planets (see below)
    • Planetary ring
  • Transneptunian objects
  • Lower body of the solar system
    • Comets
    • Planetesimales
    • Contact binaries
  • Sun
Planets
  • Mercury
  • Venus
  • Earth — Moon
  • Mars — Mars Satellites
  • Jupiter — Jupiter Satellites
  • Saturn — Saturn Satellites
  • Uranus — Uranus Satellites
  • Neptune — Neptune Satellites
Dwarf planets
  • Pluto — Pluto satellites
  • Eris — Dysnomia
  • Ceres
  • Makemake
  • Haumea — Haumea Satellites
  • Other
Minor planets
  • Vulcanoides(hypotic)
  • Apoheles asteroids
  • Near-Earth asteroids
    • PHO
    • Arjunas asteroids
    • Asteroid Atons
    • Apolos asteroids
    • Asteroides Amor
  • Asteroids crossing the orbit of Mars
  • asteroid belt (families)
    • Alindas
    • Cibels
    • Eos
    • Flowers
    • Hildas
    • Hungaria
    • Hygiene
    • Koronis
    • Marias
    • Nysas
    • Palas
    • Phocaea Family
    • Themis
    • Dresses (Vesta)
  • Trojan Asteroids
    • Trojans of the Earth
    • Trojans of Mars
    • Jupiter Trojans
    • Uranus Trojans
    • Neptune Trojans
  • Hundreds
    • Damochlorides
  • Kuiper Belt Objects
    • Cubewanos (KBOs)
    • Transneptunian resonant objects
      • Plutinos (2:3)
      • Twotinos (1:2)
  • Dispersed disk objects
    • Disbanded objects
  • Sednoids (Sedna)
Exoplanets
  • Chronic planets (theoretical)
  • Analogue to Earth
  • Eccentric Jupiter
  • Hot Jupiters
  • Hot neptunes
  • Interstate Planets
  • Planets ocean (theoretical)
  • Pulsar Planets
  • Overland
  • Trojan planets (theoretical)
Brown dwarfs
  • Types: M · L · T · And
  • Underwater dwarfs
Stars (see sections below)
  • Star rating
  • Star population III, II, I
  • Funny star
  • Star evolution
  • Variable star
  • Compact star
By lightness / star evolution
  • Protostars
  • Young star objects
  • Main implications
  • Stars of the main sequence
  • Subenanas
  • Subigants
  • Giants: Red / Blue
  • Luminous Giants
  • Supergiants: Red / Blue
  • Hypourants
  • quasiestrella (hypotic)
  • Compact stars (see below)
Compact stars
  • Black holes
    • Stellar black holes
    • Intermediate black holes
    • Supermassive black holes
    • Gamma rays (GRBs)
  • Neutron stars
    • Magnets
    • Púlsares
    • Object Thorne-Żytkow (hypotic)
  • Star of Preons (hypotic)
  • Star of quarks (hypotic.)
  • White dwarfs
    • Black dwarfs (theoric)
peculiar stars
  • Type A
    • Peculiares · metallic
  • Barrier stars
  • Blue skipped stars
  • Carbon stars
  • P Cygni
  • S-type stars
  • Stars Shell
  • Wolf-Rayet Stars
Variables – Extrinseca
  • Rotating
    • CVn
    • Elipsoidal
  • Eclipse binaries
    • Algol
    • Beta Lyrae
    • W Ursae Majoris
Variables – Intrinsic
  • Pulsants
    • Cefeidas
    • W Virginis
    • Delta Scuti
    • RR Lyrae
    • Look.
    • Semirregular
    • Irregular
    • Beta Cephei
    • Alpha Cygni
    • RV Tauri
  • Eruptive variable
    • Brilliant stars
    • Variable star T Tauri
    • Variable star FU Orionis
    • Variable Star R Coronae Borealis
    • Blue luminous variable stars
  • Variable cataclysmic stars
    • Symbiotic stars
    • Novas enanas
    • Novas
    • Supernovas
      • Type: · Ib/c · II
      • Hipernovas
      • Gamma rays (GRBs)
By spectral type
  • O (blue)
  • B (blue-white)
  • A (white)
  • F (yellow-white)
  • G (yellow)
  • K (orange)
  • M (red)
Systems
  • Planetary system
  • Star system
    • General stars
    • Binary (see below)
    • Triples
    • Higher orders
Binding stars
  • By observation
    • Optical boundary
    • Visual boundary
    • Astrometric binaries
    • Spectroscopic binaries
    • Eclipse binaries
  • Closed binaries
    • Binaries cleared
    • Semi-off boundary
    • Contact binaries
  • X-ray binaries
    • X-ray rash
Star groups
  • Stellar clusters
    • Star associations
    • Open clusters
    • Globulary clusters
    • Hypercompact star system
  • Constellations
  • Asterisms
Galaxy
  • Galaxys in general
  • Galactic groups
  • Superclusters
  • By component
    • Galactic bulk
    • Spiral ties
    • Thin discs
    • Thick disc
    • Galactic Halo
    • Galactic crowns
    • Tide ball
  • By morphology
    • Spiral Galaxys
    • Barred spiral galaxies
    • Lenticular galaxies
    • Elliptical Galaxy
    • Anular galaxies
    • Irregular Galaxys
  • By size
    • Brighter cluster
    • Giant elliptic
    • Enanas
  • By type
    • Protogalaxia
    • Galaxys with star shoots
    • Dark galaxies
    • Active galaxies
      • Radiogalaxias
      • Seyfert Galaxy
      • Quasares
      • Blazares
Discos and media
  • Interplanetary
    • Powder Cloud
    • Media
    • Magnetic field
  • Star disks
    • Acreation discs
    • Circumeste
      • Protoplanets
      • Debris
  • Intersel
    • Clouds
    • Media
    • ORCs
  • Intergalactic
    • Polvo
    • Media
    • ORCs
Nebulae
  • Emission nebulae
    • Planetary nebulae
    • Supernovas remnants
    • Plerion
    • Regions H II
  • Nebulae of reflection
  • Dark nebulae
    • Molecular clouds
    • Bok lobes
    • Proplyd
  • Regions H I
Cosmic scale
  • Microwave fund radiation
  • Cosmic curve (hypotic)
  • Dark matter
    • MACHOS
    • WIMPs
  • Domain wall (hypotic)
  • Polvo
  • Filters
  • Empty
Logarithmic representation of the observable universe with the notable astronomical objects known today. From the bottom up, the heavenly bodies are ordained according to their proximity to the Earth.
infographic list of 210 notable astronomical objects marked on a central logarithmic map of the observable universe. A small view and some distinctive feature are included for each astronomical object.

Contenido relacionado

Serpents

Serpens is one of the 88 modern constellations and was one of the 48 listed by Ptolemy. Among the modern constellations it is the only one divided into two...

(51826) Kalpanachawla

Kalpanachawla. Asteroid no. 51826 discovered by Eleanor F. Helin on July 19, 2001 from Mount Palomar within the NEAT program (Near-Earth Asteroid tracking...

Sputnik 1

Sputnik 1 was the first of several satellites launched by the Soviet Union in its Sputnik program, most of them successfully. Sputnik 2 followed, as the...
Más resultados...
Tamaño del texto:
undoredo
format_boldformat_italicformat_underlinedstrikethrough_ssuperscriptsubscriptlink
save