Tuesday, November 30, 2021

3361 - MILKY WAY GALAXY

  -  3361  -   MILKY WAY  GALAXY    -   Our galaxy is an awe-inspiring place full of stars, supernovas, nebulas, energy and dark matter, but many aspects of it remain mysterious, even to scientists.  Before the advent of electric lights, everybody on Earth had an unobstructed view of the night sky. The enormous milky band of stars crossing it was impossible to miss.  It was our Milky Way Galaxy.


---------------------  3361  -   MILKY WAY  GALAXY  

-   Ancient peoples gave different names to the cloud-like structure of our galaxy, but our modern version derives from the Greeks, who had a myth about the infant Hercules being brought to the goddess Hera, who nursed him while she was asleep. When she awoke and pulled away, her breast milk spilled across the heavens. 

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-  The source of the Greek name itself has been lost to the ages.  We're not sure exactly how many stars are in the Milky Way.  Counting stars is a tedious business. Even astronomers argue over the best way to do it. 

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-  Their telescopes see only the brightest stars in our galaxy, and many are hidden by obscuring gas and dust. One technique to estimate the stellar population of the Milky Way is to look at how fast stars are orbiting within it, which gives an indication of the gravitational tug, and therefore the mass, of the galaxy.

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-  Divide the galactic mass by the average size of a star and you should have your answer.  Stars vary widely in size, and many assumptions go into estimating the number of stars residing in the Milky Way. 

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-  The European Space Agency's Gaia satellite has mapped the location of 1,000,000,000 stars in our galaxy, and its scientists believe this represents 1 percent of the total, so perhaps the Milky Way contains about 100 billion stars. 

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-  Astronomers are also unsure exactly how much our galaxy weighs, with estimates ranging from 700 billion to 2 trillion times the mass of our sun. Most of the Milky Way's mass, perhaps 85 percent, is in the form of “dark matter“, which gives off no light and so is impossible to directly observe.

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-   A 2020 study looked at how strongly our galaxy's humongous mass gravitationally tugs on smaller galaxies orbiting it and updated the estimate of the Milky Way's mass to 960,000,000,000 times the mass of the sun.

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-  Several studies have indicated that the Milky Way and its neighbors are living out in a big empty spot in the universe.. From afar, the large-scale structure of the universe looks like a colossal cosmic web, with string-like filaments connecting dense regions separated by enormous, mostly empty voids. 

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- Our galaxy seems to be an inhabitant of the Keenan, Barger and Cowie (KBC) Void, named after three astronomers who identified it in a 2013. Last year, 2020, a separate team looked at the motion of galaxies in the cosmic web to provide additional confirmation that we're floating in one of the big, empty areas.

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-  Lurking in the heart of our galaxy is a hungry behemoth, a gigantic blackhole with the weight of 4,000,000 suns. Scientists know that it's there because they can trace the paths of stars in the Milky Way's center and see that they seem to orbit a supermassive object that can't be seen.

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-   Astronomers have been combining observations from multiple radio telescopes to try and get a glimpse of the environment surrounding the blackhole, which is packed with gas and dust spinning around the blackhole's maw. The project, called the Event Horizon Telescope, expects to have preliminary images of the blackhole's edge.

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-   When Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan sailed through the Southern Hemisphere in the 16th century, he and his crew were among the first Europeans to report on circular clusters of stars in the night sky, according to the European Southern Observatory. 

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-  These clusters are actually small galaxies that orbit our Milky Way like planets around a star, and they have been named the Small and Large Magellanic clouds. Many such dwarf galaxies orbit ours and sometimes they get eaten by our massive Milky Way. 

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-  Earlier this year, astronomers used new data from the Gaia satellite that showed millions of stars in our galaxy moving in similar narrow, "needle-like" orbits, suggesting they all originated from an earlier dwarf galaxy dubbed "the Gaia Sausage".

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-  Swirling through the mostly empty space between stars in our galaxy is a bunch of dirty grease. Oily organic molecules known as ‘aliphatic carbon compounds” are produced in certain types of stars and then are leaked out into interstellar space. 

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-  These grease-like substances could account for between a quarter and one-half of the Milky Way's interstellar carbon .   Carbon is an essential building block of living things, finding it in abundance throughout the galaxy could suggest that other star systems harbor life.

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-   The Milky Way is going to crash with its neighbor in 4 billion years.  Our galaxy isn't going to be here forever. Astronomers know that we are currently speeding toward our neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy, at around 250,000 mph . 

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-  When the crash comes, in about 4 billion years, most research has suggested that the more massive Andromeda galaxy would swallow up our own and survive. But in a recent study, astronomers reweighed Andromeda and found that it was roughly equivalent to 800 billion suns, or about on par with the Milky Way's mass. That means that exactly which galaxy will emerge less scathed from the future galactic crash remains an open question.

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-  Stars from our galactic neighbors are racing toward the Milky Way.  Researchers were recently searching for hypervelocity stars, which get thrown at mind-bending speeds from the Milky Way after interacting with the giant blackhole in its center.

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-   What they found was even stranger.  Rather than flying away from our galaxy, most of the fast stars they spotted were barreling toward us.  These could be stars from another galaxy, zooming right through the Milky Way.  

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-   These odd stars could have originated in the Large Magellanic Cloud or some other galaxy farther away. They may constitute the tip of the iceberg of a large population of similar stars.

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-  Scientists in 2010 uncovered gigantic, never-before-seen structures stretching for 25,000 light-years above and below the galaxy. Named 'Fermi bubbles' after the telescope that found them, these gamma-ray-emitting objects have defied astronomers' explanations ever since.

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-   In 2020 a team gathered evidence suggesting that the bubbles are the aftermath of an energetic event 6 million to 9 million years ago, when the supermassive blackhole in the galactic center swallowed a huge clump of gas and dust and burped out the giant, glowing clouds.

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-  Over the last decade, astronomers keep detecting odd flashes of light coming at them from the distant cosmos. Known as “fast radio bursts” (FRBs), these mysterious signals have no agreed-upon explanation. 

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-  Despite knowing about them for more than 10 years, researchers had until recently captured only 30 or so examples of these FRBs. But in a recent study, Australian scientists managed to find 20 more FRBs, nearly doubling the number of known objects.

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-   While they still don't know the odd flashes' origin, the team was able to determine that the light had traveled through several billion light-years of gas and dust, which imparted telltale signs on the signal, suggesting that the FRBs were coming from quite a long way off.

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-    Astronomers have found that a white dwarf is pummeling a companion object, either a lightweight star or a planet, with incessant blasts of heat and radiation plus a relentless gravitational pull tearing it apart.

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-  Most stars, including the Sun, will become "white dwarfs" after they begin to run out of fuel, expand and cool into a red giant, and then lose their outer layers. This evolution leaves behind a stellar nub that slowly fades for billions of years.

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- Typically, white dwarfs give off low-energy X-rays, which researchers saw in their sample. However, these white dwarfs also had surprisingly bright X-ray emission at higher energies.  See Review 3339 to learn more abut these white dwarf stars.

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-  Astronomy gives us so much more to learn.  The fact that we know that is even more amazing.

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November 28, 2021          MILKY WAY  GALAXY               3361                                                                                                                                                  

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