Dayton Daily News

Cosmic smashup coming, but Earth likely to survive

Astronomer­s say Earth unlikely to be hit by any object.

- By Seth Borenstein

Don’t WASHINGTON — worry about when the world as we know it might end. NASA has calculated that our entire Milky Way galaxy will crash into a neighborin­g galaxy with a direct head-on hit — in 4 billion years.

Astronomer­s in a NASA news conference Thursday said that years of observatio­ns from the Hubble Space Telescope provide grisly details of a long-anticipate­d galactic smashup. Astronomer­s had seen the Andromeda galaxy coming at us, but thought there was a chance that its sideways motion would make it miss or graze the Milky Way. Hubble readings now indicate that’s not the case.

“This is pretty violent as things go in the universe,” said Roeland van der Marel, an astronomer with the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore that operates Hubble. “It’s like a bad car crash in galaxy-land.”

Scientists say the sun and Earth are unlikely to be hit by stars or planets from Andromeda because of the vast emptiness of the two galaxies. So Earth should easily survive what will be a 1.2 million mile per hour galactic merger. Even at that speed, the event would take about 2 billion years.

Once it’s over, our solar system would be in a different place in the cosmos. The collision would dramatical­ly change the view of the nighttime sky from Earth, with Andromeda suddenly dominating, the astronomer­s said.

Both the Milky Way and Andromeda are about the same size and same age — 10 billion years old.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO ?? This illustrati­on released by NASA depicts a view of the night sky just before the predicted merger between our Milky Way galaxy (left) and the neighborin­g Andromeda galaxy.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO This illustrati­on released by NASA depicts a view of the night sky just before the predicted merger between our Milky Way galaxy (left) and the neighborin­g Andromeda galaxy.

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