Jump to content

Galaxies


raf

Recommended Posts

1. Actually, they don't. The spiral shape seen in some (but not all) galaxies is a result of a higher concentration of younger, brighter stars in that pattern, which makes those areas brighter. But the shaper of the galaxy itself is still a disc. The pattern itself is caused by a kind of "density wave" analogous to a traffic jam. As stars and other material enter those regions, they are slowed by gravity, and the higher density of interstellar gas leads to more stars being formed. Material passes through and continues its orbit, but the "traffic jam" itself moves slower and is left behind.

 

2. They attract each other for the same reason that all material objects in the universe attract one another: gravity.

 

3. If galaxies pass near one another, the gravity of each will distort the other, much like the moon's gravity distorts the Earth (that's what tides are), but moreso, because galaxies are more fluid and less coherent than planets. If they actually collide, they'll either merge if they weren't moving very fast relative to one another and thus can get snared by one another's gravity, or if they are moving fast they'll just pass through one another, trading some of their stars and getting their shapes greatly distorted on the way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1. Read the question wrong, see above...

 

 

2. Gravity.

 

3. Mostly they pass through each other and become one big single galaxy with some weird angular momentum, they will eventually become "flat" again... The supermassive black holes at the centre merge as well I seem to recall...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It is a supermassive black hole, at least at the centre of ours, and most other galaxies where we've looked for them (if not all).

 

Everything doesn't get sucked into them for the same reason we don't get sucked into the sun. We're in stable orbits around it. Black holes, outside the Schwarzschild radius are not special.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

is it a black hole and if so why does it not suck all the matter with it?

 

To elaborate on Klaynos' answer, black holes don't "suck things in" any more than any other object with gravity. This is a common misconception, so it bears repeating. If, for example, the Earth were to suddenly collapse into a black hole, the Moon would continue orbiting in almost exactly the same way it does now. It would still be orbiting an object of the same mass and the same distance away. The fact that that object would now be the size of a marble instead of a planet wouldn't really matter.

 

What does make black holes different (well, one of the things), is how close you can get to them. Remember, the force of gravity from something is proportional to the square of the distance from its center. (So if you're half the distance away, the gravitational pull is four times as powerful.) Here on Earth, the closest we can the center without starting to go inside is the surface, which is still about four thousand miles away. And even here, we need huge rockets to "escape" the Earth's gravity. We would need that same kind of power if we were going to escape from an Earth-mass black hole if were four thousand miles away. But, since that black hole would be tiny, we could get much, much closer, and therefore experience much, much higher gravity. It's not a "different kind" of gravity, but their unique properties (extreme density) mean that things can get closer, and experience more.

 

But again, at the same distance away, the gravity from a black hole is no different from the gravity of a planet or a star or anything else.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.