Follow this link to go to the text only version of nasa.gov
NASA -National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Follow this link to skip to the main content
+ Low Bandwidth
+ Contact NASA
Go
CLASSROOM SUBJECTSEDUCATIONAL MATERIALSACT NOWEDUCATION TV SCHEDULEEXPRESS MAILING LIST

+ Home
FOR EDUCATORS(GRADES K-4)
Features and News
Learning Resources
Internet Resources
Multimedia Resources
Contacts for Educators
Professional Development
 
 + For Educators 5-8
+ For Educators 9-12
+ For Educators Post Secondary
+ For Informal Educators

FEATURE
When Galaxies Collide
10.14.04

A big shiny pancake-shaped disc representing the Andromeda galaxy covers most of the picture.  Purple and white stars are sprinkled over a purple sky around the disc.
Image to left: An artist's impression of the night sky, four billion years from now. The Andromeda spiral galaxy looms large in the sky as it begins its fiery merger with our own Milky Way galaxy. Credit: Space Telescope Science Institute

Four billion years in the future, a group of our descendents, (whatever they may look like!) stand with their teacher and look up at a night sky ablaze with thousands of dazzling white stars. All these new stars are being born, their teacher tells them, because of an immense cosmic event. Our galaxy, the Milky Way, has collided with another galaxy, called Andromeda. Although the two galaxies are passing through each other at a million miles an hour, the whole process will take many millions of years to complete. And when everything settles down, the two galaxies will have merged into one.

Two blue and yellow speckled flattened discs represent galaxies.  Each disc is made up of thousands of tiny, individual dots that represent stars.
Image to right: Some day the Andromeda galaxy and the Milky Way will meet like this. Credit: Frank Summers (Space Telescope Science Institute), Chris Mihos (Case Western Reserve University) and Lars Hernquist (Harvard University) + View video
+ Download viewer

The teacher reassures her class that there is very little chance of stars from the Andromeda galaxy hitting the Sun or the Earth. Even though the galaxies pass clear through each other, she says, stars in a galaxy are spaced so far apart - grains of sand separated by the length of a football field - that the Andromeda stars simply pass by. But galaxies are more than just stars. They contain giant clouds of gas and dust, and when galaxies collide, these clouds smash into one another. The clouds contain the raw materials needed to make new stars, and it is the collision between clouds that has triggered a starry baby boom!

Two yellow ovals against a black background are the nuclei of two galaxies in collision.  Long blue arcs of new stars sweep from the galaxies and out into deep space.
Image to left: The wispy tails of stars and gas thrown out during this collision between two galaxies has earned it the nickname of "the Mice." Credit: ACS Science & Engineering Team, NASA

Although our story describes an event in the distant future for the Milky Way, galaxy collisions are a common sight in the universe. Galaxies are cities of stars, each shining with the light of a hundred billion suns. When it was first realized that our own Milky Way was just one galaxy of billions that fill space, astronomers referred to them as "Island Universes." But galaxies are by no means isolated. Most live in groups or clusters with dozens or hundreds of members, and these cluster galaxies are all in constant motion, pulled and twisted by their neighbor's gravity, swarming like bees around a honey pot. In such an environment, collisions can and do happen, and the result is a cosmic firework display. The neat spiral pattern that a galaxy possessed is spun out into wisps and tails; and where immense gas clouds collide there is a glittering burst of newborn stars.

Two golden-yellow spiral shaped galaxies are set against a black background.
Image to right: Two galaxies draw together, probably orbiting each other several times before the larger of the two (on the left) consumes the smaller. Credit: NASA and Hubble Heritage Team (STScI)

At present the Milky Way and Andromeda are so far apart that even light takes two million years to journey between them. But on the scale of galaxies, they are quite close together. Imagine the Milky Way galaxy as a music CD (the thickness compared to its diameter is about right). Andromeda is a spiral galaxy of similar size, so we can think of it as a second CD. Now hold these CDs about eight feet apart. The gap is closing, such that, in about four billion years, the CDs will touch. In that far-off time the Sun will still be shining, and the Earth may still be a planet teeming with life. What will our distant descendants make of the night sky?

Additional Links:
Learn more about galaxy collisions and the possible fate of the Milky Way:
+ View site

Find other galaxy collision animations:
+ View site

Learn more about the great mysteries of the universe:
+ View site





FirstGov - Your First Click to the US Government
+ Inspector General Hotline
+ Equal Employment Opportunity Data Posted Pursuant to the No Fear Act
+ FY 2005 Budget Request
+ 2003 Strategic Plan
+ Freedom of Information Act
+ The President's Management Agenda
+ FY 2003 Agency Performance and Accountability Report
+ NASA Privacy Statement, Disclaimer,
and Accessibility Certification

NASA
Editor: Shelley Canright
NASA Official: Brian Dunbar
Last Updated: October 23, 2004
+ Contact NASA