Microscopium Void

The Microscopium Void is a void—a roughly rectangular region of relatively empty space, bounded by incomplete sheets of galaxies from other voids in the southern celestial hemisphere. It lies within the boundaries of the constellation of Microscopium.[1] It was discovered and named by South African astronomer Tony Fairall in 1984.

See

gollark: I can basically only catch the occasional unbreedable.
gollark: How do you people catch such gorvy things?
gollark: It took me hours to even get a generic hatchling for one. If you have a more specific request you may get it though.
gollark: Unless God-Emperor TJ09 develops sanity and common sense.
gollark: __***P. A. G. I. N. A. T. I. O. N***__

References

  1. Maurellis, A.; Fairall, A. P.; Matravers, D. R.; Ellis, G. F. R. (1990). "A two-dimensional sheet of galaxies between two southern voids". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 229 (1): 75–79. Bibcode:1990A&A...229...75M. ISSN 0004-6361.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.