Cosmic smashup predicted, but Earth will survive
By | Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Don't worry
about when the world as we know it might end. NASA has calculated that our entire Milky Way galaxy will
crash into a neighboring galaxy with a direct head-on hit — in 4 billion
years.
Astronomers in a NASA news conference
Thursday said that years of observations from the Hubble Space Telescope provide grisly
details of a long-anticipated galactic smashup. Astronomers had seen the Andromeda galaxy coming
at us, but thought there was a chance that its sideways motion would make it
miss or graze the Milky Way. Hubble readings now indicate that's not the
case.
"This is pretty violent as things go in the
universe," said Roeland
van der Marel, an astronomer with the Space Telescope Science Institute in
Baltimore that operates Hubble. "It's like a bad car crash in galaxy-land."
Scientists say the sun and Earth are
unlikely to be hit by stars or planets from Andromeda because of the vast
emptiness of the two galaxies. So Earth should easily survive what will be a 1.2
million mile per hour galactic merger. Even at that speed, the event would take
about 2 billion years.
Once it's over, our solar system would be
in a different place in the cosmos. The collision would dramatically change the
view of the nighttime sky from Earth with Andromeda suddenly dominating, the
astronomers said.
The only way Andromeda could miss colliding
with the Milky Way is if it were moving sideways about six times faster than
Hubble indicates it is, said van der Marel, who is publishing the
latest findings in an upcoming issue of Astrophysical Journal. Five years ago,
Avi Loeb, head of Harvard University's astronomy department, simulated this
crash and pronounced a miss unlikely. He said the Hubble results strengthen his
earlier findings. He calls the newly merged galaxy "Milkomeda."
Both the Milky Way and Andromeda are about
the same size and same age — 10 billion years old. At times they've been
considered virtual twins so it's hard to tell which of the galaxies will get the
worst of the collision, van der Marel said.
When the collision is in full swing in 4
billion years, he said the sun will still have another 2 billion years before
its expected death. However, by that time it will have grown so large and so hot
that Earth might no longer be habitable without super-engineering techniques, he
said.
While this upcoming cosmic crash is dwarfed
by the Big Bang which created the entire universe, van der Marel said this one
could be called "the big smashup."
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Always amazing.
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Always amazing.
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