Disc galaxy
A disc galaxy (or disk galaxy) is a galaxy characterized by a galactic disc. This is a flattened circular volume of stars that are mainly orbiting the galactic core in the same plane.[1] These galaxies may or may not include a central non-disc-like region (a galactic bulge).[2] They will typically have an orbiting mass of gas and dust in the same plane as the stars. Interactions with other nearby galaxies can perturb and stretch the galactic disk.

The Sculptor Galaxy (NGC 253) is a disk galaxy.
Disc galaxy types include:
- Spiral galaxies:
- Unbarred spiral galaxies: (types S, SA)
- Barred spiral galaxies: (type SB)
- Intermediate spiral galaxies: (type SAB)
- Lenticular galaxies: (types E8, S0, SA0, SB0, SAB0)
Galaxies that are not disc types include:
- Elliptical galaxies: (type dE)
- Irregular galaxies: (type dI)
See also
References
- "Disk Galaxies | COSMOS". astronomy.swin.edu.au.
- "The Galactic Bulge". burro.case.edu.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.