Yes, some of the galaxies are moving toward each other like our milky way and Andromeda moving toward each other with the speed 120 km per second and after 3 billion years from now these galaxies collide with one another. The current distance of Andromeda from milky way is about 2.5 million light years
Sorry, Andromeda and earth are moving away from each other, not towards each other.
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No, the growth of the universe is caused by the galaxies moving away from each other, with no relation to their size.
The Andromeda galaxy is moving towards our Milky Way galaxy at a speed of about 110 km/s. This relative motion is causing the galaxies to slowly approach each other and will eventually result in a collision in billions of years.
Yes. Our own solar system is part of the Milky Way galaxy. Thousands of other systems with planets have been discovered in our galaxy. The number of planets in our galaxy alone prbably numbers in the billions.
Yes, our galaxy, the Milky Way, is part of a group of galaxies called the Local Group. Within the Local Group, the Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxy are the two largest galaxies and they are actually moving towards each other. It is believed that the Local Group is also moving towards the Virgo Cluster, a larger cluster of galaxies. So, in a sense, our galaxy is moving within the universe, but it is not orbiting around a single object like a planet orbits a star.
No. No material object can travel at the speed of light. Does the Milky Way galaxy move at all? An excellent, and perhaps unanswerable question. Movement exists only in reference to other things, and there is, according to Einstein, no "preferred frame of reference" that we might use to determine if the Milky Way galaxy is moving. We see that other galaxies appear to be moving away from us. Are the other galaxies moving while we are standing still, or is the Milky Way moving away from THEM? We do not know. We may never know. However there is evidence that, in general, galaxies are moving away from each other, and there are a few theories that go along with this. On that they will come back toward each other, they will slow and stop, no longer moving away nor towards each other, and finally that they will just continue moving away which is most widely accepted as evidence suggest that they are actually accelerating rather than decelerating.
Yes, furthest the galaxy more it's speed of moving away from each other also universe is expanding continuously therefore space between galaxies is also expanding . Redshift is directly proportional to the distance b/w the galaxies therefore distant galaxies red-shifted at faster rate
Is they are moving away from each other it is a divargent boundryif they are moving towards each other it is a convergent bounderyIf they are sliding pass each other its a transormation boundery
It has the same things the other galaxies have i.e. stars planets etc . It's just that it is very big . Comments : I think the answer may be that Andromeda gives out light that is blue shifted instead of the red shift for most galaxies. So the answer is " a light spectrum that's blue shifted".
Relationship between distance of galaxy and its speed is that galaxies are moving away from the Earth at velocities proportional to their distance. In other words, the further they are the faster they are moving away from us.
We are part of the milky way galaxy, so we are moving with it.