The shells of M85 (center) // Guillaume Gruntz, Benoit SAINTOT, Eddie Seguin, & Dan_I
NGC 4394 is to the right and IC 3292 is to the left.

seen from France
seen from Türkiye
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Maldives

seen from Malaysia
seen from Czechia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Brazil

seen from South Africa
The shells of M85 (center) // Guillaume Gruntz, Benoit SAINTOT, Eddie Seguin, & Dan_I
NGC 4394 is to the right and IC 3292 is to the left.

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♦️Like this, if you are not scared of the coronavirus♦️ . . . Repost @watermark78 ・・・ Corona-bird-Spanish-swine-flu ready! #watermark78 #ak47 #ak74 #kalash #gas #gasmask #mpap #m85 #m92 #m85pap #century #rifle (at Don't Tread On Me) https://www.instagram.com/p/B91wXZsF3hS/?igshid=hg8fqxs92wc8
Zastava M85 Mini-Mauser - .223 Rem.
Days of Messier: Elliptical Galaxy M85
Pierre Méchain discovered M85 in 1781. The galaxy lies 60 million light years away, near the edge of the Virgo cluster. It spans 125,000 light years and contains around 400 billion stars.
M85 has relatively little free hydrogen, and complex internal structures possibly indicating a past collision with another galaxy. There is some evidence that the galaxy lacks a central black hole.
Yesterday: M84, an elliptical galaxy Tomorrow: M86, an elliptical galaxy

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M85 (center) and NGC 4394 (bottom) // Jerry Macon
M85 (center), NGC 4394 (left), and IC 3292 (right) // AnaTa
M85 (upper left) and other galaxies in Coma Berenices // Andrew Burwell