The Daily Courier

Our galaxy is headed toward a collision

- KEN Sky Gazing Ken Tapping is an astronomer with the Dominion Radio Astrophysi­cal Observator­y.. E-mail: ken.tapping@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca

“Collision of the Galaxies” sounds like a good title for a spectacula­r disaster movie.

Actually, a lot of things in the universe depend on things smashing together, including galaxies.

The object Arp 299, is actually two galaxies colliding. The two, designated NGC 3690 and IC 694, lying about 134 million light years away from us, have been colliding for around 700 million years. The Hubble Space Telescope image can be found at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arp_299.

The image is dotted with many bright, blue stars. This is interestin­g because there are only two types of bright, blue star.

One kind are young stars that will dim down a bit as they settle down. The other kind are stars that collected an exceptiona­lly large amount of hydrogen when they formed.

These stars shine extremely brightly, run out of fuel soon, collapse and then explode.

These explosions are called supernovae. In either case, these blue stars cannot be very old. This relates to another interestin­g aspect of this pair of galaxies: the oddly large number of supernova explosions. What has produced these unusual circumstan­ces?

If you look at a nearby spiral galaxy, such as our neighbour, the Andromeda Galaxy, you will see the spiral arms glowing with little knots of pink, and sparkling with young stars.

The Milky Way, would look much the same from a distance. The reason is the spiral arms of galaxies are loaded with hydrogen gas, the primary ingredient for making stars.

If we look closer, we will see that these clouds are not uniform; some regions are denser than others. On occasion something triggers one of these denser regions to collapse, forming one or more stars.

These youngsters are hot and blue, and their high output of ultraviole­t radiation makes the surroundin­g clouds glow pink.

This pink, a characteri­stic of hydrogen, is known as hydrogen-alpha emission. Therefore, when we look at a distant galaxy, those pink glows mean two things: there is hydrogen to glow, and hot, blue stars to make it glow.

However, the jewel-box of bright, blue stars we see in the Arp 299 pair of galaxies is unusual.

Some major event caused massive collapses of hydrogen clouds, forming showers of new stars.

We are pretty sure this outburst of star formation was caused by the two galaxies colliding.

Paradoxica­lly, collisions between galaxies are not totally catastroph­ic; they trigger the formation of new stars and planets.

A video at youtube.com/ watch?v=J_UwUuJFT3Q is a good example of what we believe a collision between two galaxies would look like.

The nearest star to our sun, lies about four light years away. This distance is fairly typical of the distance between stars. So the chance of stars in two colliding galaxies passing close by one another is tiny.

As fragments fly around and the galaxies combine, the inhabitant­s of worlds in those galaxies will only see their equivalent of the Milky Way changing shape over millions of years.

However, for the gas clouds between the stars it’s a different matter. These will collide and collapse, forming new stars.

The Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy are racing towards each other at 110 km/s, and will collide in about four billion years.

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The only easily visible planet is Mars, which can be found high in the southwest during the evening. The moon will reach first quarter tonight.

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