Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Andromeda Galaxy
The pictures we can see through our telescopes of the Andromeda Galaxy are 2.5million years old.
How do we know what has happened in since then? Could that galaxy move towards our own milky way. And what happens when galaxies collide?
How do we know what has happened in since then? Could that galaxy move towards our own milky way. And what happens when galaxies collide?
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No best answer has yet been selected by rov1200. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We know the speed of it's motion then and it's direction so we know where it will be.
It will start to colide with ours in about 3 billion years or so.
About the time the sun goes supergiant and distroys the earth
http://en.wikipedia.o...93Milky_Way_collision
It will start to colide with ours in about 3 billion years or so.
About the time the sun goes supergiant and distroys the earth
http://en.wikipedia.o...93Milky_Way_collision
Here's some rather pretty pictures of some galaxies that are colliding right now.
http://www.google.co....QwAA&biw=1280&bih=832
http://www.google.co....QwAA&biw=1280&bih=832
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no, rov, the collision of the Galaxy will be a fairly non violent affair, obviosly there will be some collisiions but mostly they will embrace the spaces between the stars and start an oscilation dance, probably resulting in a large globular Galaxy rather than a spiral. Possibly a giant black hole binary could result.
I read about this somewhere before jake but this link describes the output of a simulation:
http://www.universeto...t-happens-to-the-sun/
http://www.universeto...t-happens-to-the-sun/
This is one of my favourites among merging galaxies . . . don't ask me why ~ http://upload.wikimed.../06/Warped_galaxy.jpg
Dark matter aside, most of a galaxy is "empty" space, so two can combine and blend with few actual collisions. We can not know what has happened to Andromeda since the light that reaches us now, left that galaxy. Our present understanding says that information can not get to us faster than the speed of light.