New Reply

Observing a galaxy in a special way

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Aug7-12, 05:13 PM   #1
 

Observing a galaxy in a special way


I'm having a bit of trouble wording this particular question, but here goes. Let's say I'm observing a spiral galaxy which is 100,000 lightyears across. The furthermost stars are seen as they were 100,000 years ago (not counting the number of lightyears away from the galaxy I'm positioned). What if I were wearing a special visor that allowed me to see each star's current position? What would that look like? Would the galaxy no longer be spiral? Would all the stars be cramped together in some strange shape?
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
science news on PhysOrg.com

>> Ants and carnivorous plants conspire for mutualistic feeding
>> Forecast for Titan: Wild weather could be ahead
>> Researchers stitch defects into the world's thinnest semiconductor
Aug7-12, 05:36 PM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
Quote by Cody Richeson View Post
I'm having a bit of trouble wording this particular question, but here goes. Let's say I'm observing a spiral galaxy which is 100,000 lightyears across. The furthermost stars are seen as they were 100,000 years ago (not counting the number of lightyears away from the galaxy I'm positioned). What if I were wearing a special visor that allowed me to see each star's current position? What would that look like? Would the galaxy no longer be spiral? Would all the stars be cramped together in some strange shape?

Yes, you certainly are having trouble formulating the question.

You've neglected to say how far away it is and you have neglected to say whether you are seeing it from above (looks like a circle) or edge-on (looks like a bulbous rectangle).

If, for example, it is 10 billion light years away and you are seeing it from above then you are seeing it pretty much exactly as it was 10 billion years ago. If you are seeing it from right at the edge (physically impossible, for you right now, but lets just say) and edge-on, then the stars nearby are as they are and those on the other side are seen as they were 100,000 years ago.
New Reply

Tags
galaxy, light speed, lightyears
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: Observing a galaxy in a special way
Thread Forum Replies
What does 'observing' mean Quantum Physics 3
observing the new supernova in Ursa Major (M101, pinwheel galaxy) General Astronomy 6
Finding the mass of our Galaxy and the amount of stars in our Galaxy Precalculus Mathematics Homework 1
Special relativity - observing spinning objects Special & General Relativity 4
Observing question General Astronomy 1