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how will the pattern of stars in the milky way change over time? |
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| Dec22-12, 06:19 AM | #1 |
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how will the pattern of stars in the milky way change over time?
how will the pattern of stars in the milky way change as the galaxy rotates, will they be rotated in some direction or drifted or something?
and what is the timescale for that to happen? Thanks!! |
| Dec22-12, 08:00 AM | #2 |
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The relative motion of nearby stars (so nearly everything you can see in the sky) is nearly random. They will head towards some random fixed point in the sky, and get dimmer, while other stars come from some random position and get brighter. Typical relative velocities are ~50km/s or ~2 light years per 10000 years. For stars 100 light years away (see the brightest stars), this gives a timescale of ~500,000 years until they are at completely different positions. Some stars are much closer, and some stars are quicker, so they moved by a visible amount (for the naked eye) in the last ~2000 years. 61 Cygni, for example, is visible to the naked eye and moves with ~5arcseconds per year or 1° in ~700 years. This is two times the diameter of the moon.
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| Dec24-12, 06:31 PM | #3 |
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Eventually, due to an accelerating expansion of the universe, it will be impossible to see any stars!
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| Dec25-12, 06:53 AM | #4 |
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how will the pattern of stars in the milky way change over time?Damo |
| Dec25-12, 08:54 AM | #5 |
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It would need a big rip to pull our galaxy apart*, and there are no signs of this. But even if with a big rip, our sun will reach the end of its life long before that. All other stars won't live forever either.
*well, the collision with Andromeda in ~4 billion years will significantly change its shape as well. |
| Dec25-12, 10:36 AM | #6 |
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Here are insights. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proper_motion http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_kinematics http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/...1/motions.html http://abyss.uoregon.edu/~js/ast122/lectures/lec08.html http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/l...on/proper.html http://burro.astr.cwru.edu/Academics...larmotion.html http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/W3Brows...talog/ppm.html Atlas of stars - http://www.atlasoftheuniverse.com/12lys.html |
| Dec25-12, 10:41 AM | #7 |
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Ah yes, but even introductory books like Brian Greene explain that it isn't everything moving randomly, but space itself is expanding. So the gravitational boundedness only matters so long before the space between all of us expands and we can see no stars locally either.
A more scientific source: http://smithsonianscience.org/2011/04/big-bang-model/ |
| Dec25-12, 12:09 PM | #8 |
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See Astronuc's links for scientific sources. |
| Dec26-12, 01:25 AM | #9 |
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Not our local group! Damo |
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