TSV

Types of Astronomical Objects - TSV

Astronomical objects refer to naturally occurring physical entities, associations, or structures that exist within the observable universe. Various objects exist at different scales and with different properties, including stars, planets, satellites, asteroids, comets, nebulae, galaxies, and black holes, which are systematically classified by organizations such as NASA and ESA. These classifications are based on the physical properties, evolutionary stages, and cosmic positioning of celestial bodies.

astronomy celestial bodies stars planets galaxies nebulae black holes universe NASA ESA
code	slug	name	description	category
01	stars	Stars	Hot plasma bodies bound by their own gravity that generate energy through nuclear fusion.	Stellar System
02	planets	Planets	Bodies orbiting stars that are spherical due to sufficient mass and have cleared their orbital neighborhood.	Stellar System
03	satellites	Natural Satellites	Natural bodies that orbit planets, asteroids, or other celestial bodies.	Stellar System
04	asteroids	Asteroids	Relatively small Solar System bodies composed of rock and metal, mainly found in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.	Small Solar System Bodies
05	comets	Comets	Small bodies composed of ice, dust, and rock that form a coma and tail when approaching the Sun.	Small Solar System Bodies
06	nebulae	Nebulae	Giant clouds of dust, hydrogen, helium, and other ionized gases existing in space.	Interstellar Medium
07	galaxies	Galaxies	Massive gravitationally bound systems of stars, interstellar matter, dark matter, and black holes.	Extragalactic
08	black-holes	Black Holes	Regions of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape.	Stellar Evolution
09	star-clusters	Star Clusters	Groups of stars bound by gravity, with two main types: open clusters and globular clusters.	Stellar System
10	quasars	Quasars	Active galactic nuclei centered on supermassive black holes, extremely luminous radio sources.	Extragalactic