20 Things You Didn't Know About...
Galaxies
The Milky Way rotates at
560,000 miles per hour, and makes a full revolution every 200 million years.
1. Eighteenth-century philosopher
Immanuel Kant was one of the first people to theorize that the Milky Way was
not the only galaxy in the universe. Kant coined the term island universe to
describe a galaxy.
2. Astronomers now estimate that there
are 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe.
3. One of the earliest uses of the
English term Milky Way was in Geoffrey Chaucer’s 14th-century poem “The House
of Fame.” He likened the galaxy to a celestial roadway.
4. While we’re talking road trips: Due to
the expansion of the universe, all other galaxies are receding from our own.
Galaxies farther from the Milky Way are speeding away faster than those nearby.
5. Some of the galaxies receding from the
Milky Way are ellipsoidal, like footballs. Galaxies can also be thin and flat
with tentacle-like arms — just like the Milky Way.
6. Galaxies come in irregular shapes,
too, including many dwarf galaxies. These galaxies, the smallest in the
universe, contain only a few hundred or a few thousand stars (compared with 100
billion stars in the Milky Way).
7. You’ll often find dwarf galaxies
clustered around larger galaxies.
8. Dwarf galaxies frequently lose their
stars to their larger neighbors via gravity. The stars stream across the sky as
the dwarf galaxies are ripped apart. Alas, you can’t see it with the naked eye.
9. You also can’t see the enormous black
hole lurking in the center of the Milky Way, though if you’ve ever looked at
the constellation Sagittarius, the archer, you’ve looked in the right
direction.
10. Most galaxies have a black hole at the
center, and astronomers have found the mass is consistently about 1/1000th the
mass of the host galaxy.
11. Two of the closest galaxies to the
Milky Way — the Small Magellanic Cloud and the Large Magellanic Cloud — may not
have black holes. Or, because both are low-mass galaxies, their central black
holes may be too small to detect.
12. Every galaxy does have dust, though.
Produced by stars, the dust causes light to look redder than it really is when
observed visually, which can make it difficult for astronomers studying
properties of stars.
13. That dust can really travel, too. Some
galaxies drive galactic winds, expelling dust and gas at hundreds of kilometers
per second into the intergalactic medium, the space between galaxies.
14. These winds are caused by starlight
exerting pressure on the dust and gas; the fastest galactic winds are in
distant galaxies that are forming stars more rapidly than the Milky Way.
15. The Milky Way rotates at about 250
kilometers per second (about 560,000 mph) and completes a full revolution about
every 200 million years.
16. One galactic revolution ago, dinosaurs
ruled the Earth.
17. Galaxies rotate
faster than predicted based on the gravity of their stars alone. Astronomers
infer that the extra gravitational force is coming from dark matter, which does
not emit or reflect light.
18. Dark matter aside, galaxies are mostly
empty space. If the stars within galaxies were shrunk to the size of oranges,
they would be separated by 4,800 kilometers (3,000 miles).
19. If galaxies were shrunk to the size of
apples, neighboring galaxies would only be a few meters apart. The relative
proximity of galaxies means that galaxies occasionally merge.
20. In about 4 billion years, the Milky
Way will merge with the Andromeda galaxy. The result of the merging process —
which will take at least a hundred million years — will be an ellipsoidal
galaxy nicknamed “Milkomeda.”
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