![1 vs 3000: I couldn't afford a Telescope or a Tracker, so I spent 3 nights taking over 3000 Exposures of the Andromeda Galaxy using just an entry-level camera from a fairly 1 vs 3000: I couldn't afford a Telescope or a Tracker, so I spent 3 nights taking over 3000 Exposures of the Andromeda Galaxy using just an entry-level camera from a fairly](https://external-preview.redd.it/scYAIQbtQ1XXxUnHSPxeTj2dngTivGQByCVvMAzXWJc.jpg?auto=webp&s=7aa899947fb89378bec8de6f61ec68f1b5ed622d)
1 vs 3000: I couldn't afford a Telescope or a Tracker, so I spent 3 nights taking over 3000 Exposures of the Andromeda Galaxy using just an entry-level camera from a fairly
If the Andromeda Galaxy is the furthest thing away we can see with the naked eye from Earth (at 2+ million light years away), does it appear different or 'more recent' when
![View of the planet Earth from space during a sunrise against The Andromeda Galaxy ( Messier 31) with Hubble space telescope " Elements of this image furnished by NASA" Stock Illustration | Adobe Stock View of the planet Earth from space during a sunrise against The Andromeda Galaxy ( Messier 31) with Hubble space telescope " Elements of this image furnished by NASA" Stock Illustration | Adobe Stock](https://as1.ftcdn.net/v2/jpg/03/41/87/82/1000_F_341878283_l4vPgVanmdKcic2yQS7OFr2T8I0VZ3QB.jpg)