A galaxy is a system of stars, dust, and gas held together by gravity.  Our solar system is in a galaxy called the Milky Way. Scientists  estimate that there are more than 100 billion galaxies scattered  throughout the visible universe. Astronomers have photographed millions  of them through telescopes. The most distant galaxies ever photographed  are as far as 10 billion to 13 billion light-years away. A light-year is  the distance that light travels in a vacuum in a year -- about 5.88  trillion miles (9.46 trillion kilometers). Galaxies range in diameter  from a few thousand to a half-million light-years. Small galaxies have  fewer than a billion stars. Large galaxies have more than a trillion. 
The Milky Way has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years. The solar  system lies about 25,000 light-years from the center of the galaxy.  There are about 100 billion stars in the Milky Way.  
Only three galaxies outside the Milky Way are visible with the  unaided eye. People in the Northern Hemisphere can see the Andromeda  Galaxy, which is about 2 million light-years away. People in the  Southern Hemisphere can see the Large Magellanic Cloud, which is about  160,000 light-years from Earth, and the Small Magellanic Cloud, which is  about 180,000 light-years away.  
Groups of galaxies 
Galaxies are distributed unevenly in space. Some have no close  neighbor. Others occur in pairs, with each orbiting the other. But most  of them are found in groups called clusters. A cluster may contain from a  few dozen to several thousand galaxies. It may have a diameter as large  as 10 million light-years.  
Clusters of galaxies, in turn, are grouped in larger structures called superclusters.    On even larger scales, galaxies are arranged in huge networks. The networks    consist of interconnected strings or filaments of galaxies surrounding relatively    empty regions known as voids. One of the largest structures ever mapped is a    network of galaxies known as the Great Wall. This structure is more than 500    million light-years long and 200 million light-years wide. 
Shapes of galaxies 
New stars are constantly forming out of gas and dust in spiral  galaxies. Smaller groups of stars called globular clusters often  surround spiral galaxies. A typical globular cluster has about 1 million  stars.    
Elliptical galaxies range in shape from almost perfect spheres to flattened    globes. The light from an elliptical galaxy is brightest in the center and gradually    becomes fainter toward its outer regions. As far as astronomers can determine,    elliptical galaxies rotate much more slowly than spiral galaxies or not at all.    The stars within them appear to move in random orbits. Elliptical galaxies have    much less dust and gas than spiral galaxies have, and few new stars appear to    be forming in them.  
 Galaxies of a third kind, irregular galaxies, lack a simple shape. Some consist  mostly of blue stars and puffy clouds of gas, but little dust. The Magellanic  Clouds are irregular galaxies of this type. Others are made up mostly of bright  young stars along with gas and dust. 
Galaxies move relative to one another, and occasionally two  galaxies come so close to each other that the gravitational force of  each changes the shape of the other. Galaxies can even collide. If two  rapidly moving galaxies collide, they may pass right through each other  with little or no effect. However, when slow-moving galaxies collide,  they can merge into a single galaxy that is bigger than either of the  original galaxies. Such mergers can produce spiral filaments of stars  that can extend more than 100,000 light-years into space.
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