What happens when galaxies collide? A billion year gravitational waltz.

This computer simulation includes images from Hubble of actual galactic collisions at different stages.

Credit: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers
Source: https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/details.cgi?aid=30686

Hyperwall: 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.<br /> 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.

@wonderofscience

A short version of what you posted with audio.

Excellent post, thanks.

https://youtube.com/shorts/2xhaHWl_q6I?feature=share

Credit: @ScienceExplainedOfficial

The Andromeda-Milky Way Collision

YouTube
@farstrider @wonderofscience if there's a black hole at the centre of every galaxy, does that mean when these two galaxy's collide they will also merge together?

@Just_Here_For_The_Porn @wonderofscience

Interestingly there is a upper limit to how large supermassive black holes can grow. Supermassive black holes in any quasar or active galactic nucleus appear to have a theoretical upper limit of physically around 50 billion M☉ for typical parameters, as anything above this slows growth down to a crawl, slowdown tends to start around 10 billion M☉ and causes the unstable accretion disk surrounding the black hole to coalesce into stars that orbit it.