Do objects within a galaxy rotate in the same direction as the galxy itself?

AI Thread Summary
Objects within a galaxy, such as stars and solar systems, do not consistently rotate in the same direction as the galaxy itself. The rotation of the Milky Way is defined by averaging the movements of its stars, but individual systems can have different orientations. For instance, the solar system's plane is tilted 60 degrees relative to the galactic plane, leading to a mismatch in rotational direction. While the solar system and most planets rotate counterclockwise, the galaxy's rotation can be clockwise. Overall, the alignment of rotational axes among different solar systems appears to be random and uncorrelated.
Lino
Messages
309
Reaction score
4
Hi, I have been trying to understand the nature of rotating objects within a galaxy, but with limited sucess. I am trying to understand if the rotation of objects (for example solar systems / stars / black holes within the Milkyway galaxy) are generally consistent with the rotation of the galaxy itself? (i.e. do things generally rotate in the same direction?) And if the answer to this is positive, is it "generally" or "almost always" or "always"?

Thanking you in anticipation.

Regards,

Noel.
 
Space news on Phys.org
The rotation of the galaxy is defined by averaging the rotation of the stars, etc. within the galaxy. The rotation cannot be defined independently.
 
Thanks mathman. I think I understand, but can I ask the same question in a different way? Is the orbit of planets in our solar system in the same direction as the overall rotation of the Milkyway, & is the orbit of other planets (in other solar systems - but still in the Milkyway) in the same direction (as the Milkyway).

Regards,

Noel.
 
(Maybe I should have phrased the question as "is the spin of the star generally in the same direction as the rotation of the galaxy?")
 
The answer is no. There is no alignment of axes.

The plane of the solar system is TILTED 60 degrees from the plane of the Galaxy.

I don't know much definite about the orientation of other planet systems. But from what I've read nobody EXPECTS them to have their axes aligned in any special direction. The expectation seems to be that it's basically random.

Also the SENSE of the rotation is not necessarily consistent.

Roughly speaking the Solar System N pole (instead of point straight out of the plane of the galaxy, perpendicular "up") is tilted 60 degrees towards the direction that the Sun and her planets are going.
Now the sense in which the Sun and most of the planets are rotating follows a RIGHT HAND FIST rule, with your thumb in the N pole direction. If you look down on your thumb the fingers are going counterclockwise and that is how the Earth is rotating and also how the Earth is orbiting, and the sun is rotating, etc.

But if you tried to align the solarsystem with the galaxy by tilting the solarsystem axis 60 degrees back upright, you would find that even though the axes were parallel the galaxy would be revolving according to a LEFT HAND fist rule. If some aliens would take you on their ship far far above the Earth's north pole and you looked back you would see most of the stuff in the solar system rotating and orbiting counterclockwise, but you would see the sun and other stars orbiting the galactic center CLOCKWISE.

So there is a strong inconsistency. One has to suspect it's random uncorrelated except for nearby things.
 
Last edited:
Thanks Marcus.
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
Why was the Hubble constant assumed to be decreasing and slowing down (decelerating) the expansion rate of the Universe, while at the same time Dark Energy is presumably accelerating the expansion? And to thicken the plot. recent news from NASA indicates that the Hubble constant is now increasing. Can you clarify this enigma? Also., if the Hubble constant eventually decreases, why is there a lower limit to its value?
Back
Top