davidge
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How frequently is collision of stars in galaxies? If there are 100 bi galaxies and 100 bi stars each, then how many collisions should we expect in within, say, 1 year?
The discussion centers on the frequency of stellar collisions within galaxies, specifically addressing the likelihood of such events occurring among 100 billion stars in 100 billion galaxies. Participants conclude that while collisions are theoretically possible, the vast distances between stars and their orderly motion make such events extremely unlikely, estimating a collision may occur every 150 years in the Milky Way. The conversation also references stellar collisions in globular clusters, which are more frequent due to higher star densities, occurring approximately once every 10,000 years.
PREREQUISITESAstronomers, astrophysics students, and anyone interested in the dynamics of stellar interactions and the statistical likelihood of stellar collisions in galaxies.
davidge said:If there are 100 bi galaxies and 100 bi stars each,
davidge said:then how many collisions should we expect in within, say, 1 year?
Does a stellar merger count as a collision?davidge said:How frequently is collision of stars in galaxies? If there are 100 bi galaxies and 100 bi stars each, then how many collisions should we expect in within, say, 1 year?
I'm pretty sure you have overstated the likelihood of it happening.davenn said:somewhere between zero and none at all
phinds said:I'm pretty sure you have overstated the likelihood of it happening.![]()
stefan r said:Someone should throw out numbers...
The sun's radius is 2.25461×10−8 parsec.
The local stellar density is about 0.14 stars per cubic parsec.
The sun move about 20km/s relative to neighborhood stars. one parsec in 1.5 x 1012 seconds which is about 49,000 years.
1.5 x 1012/ (2.25461×10−8 x 0.14)= 4.75 x 1020 seconds which is
1.5 x 1013 years for a collision.
With 100 billion stars in the milky way might happen in 150 years or so. very rough estimate. Leaning strongly toward none in a given year.
A stellar collision is the coming together of two stars.[1] The mechanisms that drives such collisions include gravity, gravitational radiation, and other mechanisms not well understood. Astronomers predict that events of this type occur in the globular clusters of our galaxy about once every 10,000 years.[2]
Did not square a number.davenn said:If you read the link by BenAS, you will find your estimates are out by a number of magnitudes
I really cannot make sense of that in the context of this threadstefan r said:Did not square a number.
Is also not relevant. If the definition of "collision" is a merger than just coming within 2 solar radii is not a "collision". I thought my concussion was caused by a collision between my skull and pavement. Since my skull did not merge with the cement it must have been a close encounter.
yup, indeed :)Vanadium 50 said:And globular clusters do have evidence of collisions, or at least mass transfer (what does it mean for two gas balls to collide?). These are the so-called blue stragglers.