Galactic collisions result in a billion-year gravitational dance, as shown in this captivating supercomputer simulation. The simulation depicts the collision of two spiral galaxies and is complemented by actual images of galactic collisions at various stages captured by Hubble.

Credit: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers
Source: https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/30686
#Astronomy #Space #Universe #AltText4Me

NASA Scientific Visualization Studio - Galaxy Collisions: Simulation vs Observations

Galaxies are vast swarms of billions of stars along with huge interstellar clouds of gas and dust. A spiral galaxy has a broad, thin disk shape, with a bulge of stars in its core, Within the disk are winding arms of dark dust lanes and bright star-forming regions, This structure is stable when left alone, but is relatively easily disturbed when another galaxy passes near. Astronomers have studied galaxy interactions for decades, and Hubble s keen vision has been particularly useful for examining new details.A 2008 Hubble press release unveiled 59 images of galaxy interactions. Each image, however, captures only one moment in a billion-year-long collision process. This visualization of a galaxy collision supercomputer simulation shows the entire collision sequence, and compares the different stages of the collision to different interacting galaxy pairs observed by Hubble. The two spiral galaxies in the simulation distort, twist, and merge together, matching different images at different times and different viewing angles. With this combination of research simulations and high resolution observations, these titanic crashes can be better illustrated and understood. A galaxy collision simualtion compared, at different stages, to different galaxy collision images from Hubble For More InformationSee [http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2008/16/](http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2008/16/)

SVS

@wonderofscience
I wonder what it would feel like sitting on a planet going around one of those stars?

A bit like the fayre ground Waltzers in slow motion with cool light show maybe?

@ColonelDare
Death from gravitational vagaries, planetary strikes, and/or atmosphere being ripped off. Etc.
@ColonelDare @wonderofscience
Stars r far apart in galaxies, but maybe extra stellar neighbors wld send extra comets into solar system from oort cloud? Wonder if its been simulated?
@wonderofscience Ich habe grade "Der Untergang des Universums" von Brandon Q Morris gelesen - Da passt die Visualisierung gut zu den Gedanken-Bilder die ich beim Lesen hatte...
(Extreme Zeiträume sollte man denken können, es reichen nicht mal 3 Legislaturperioden ; - )

@wonderofscience Galaxies are mostly made of empty space, so collisions between the stars are relatively rare.

But it's gotta happen sometimes, and boy that would be something to see...

@wonderofscience

Wonderful. When this moving simulation of galactic collision stops moving, it shows an actual galactic collision seen by our telescopes. Each dot a star.

All these galactic collisions are silent, nothing crashes, no stars collide, planets orbits unaffected, its a swoosh, not a kerblang.

Our galaxy has a galaxy heading at us. Should sentients be watching billions of years from now, only astronomers will notice Andromeda joining.

@wonderofscience Wow, talk about being at the right place at the right time to capture that on film. I'm lucky if I can get a bird to cross the camera!

When will the galaxies do it again so I can see it?

@wonderofscience a billion years! maybe the reason no aliens have contacted us is because on cosmic time scales we don’t even qualify as a blink.
@wonderofscience This is the coolest thing I’ve seen today.

@wonderofscience Astonishing to try and comprehend the magnitude of this. But can I dare ask one question at the risk of sounding like an idiot? Where is the energy or force coming from that causes this scale of interaction and kinetic movement of such large combinations of matter?

I’m genuinely curious . . .