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It doesn't make much sense to talk about something being 52 light-years away from a galaxy: A typical galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years, and doesn't have a clearly-defined border. Distances between galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years.It doesn't make much sense to talk about something being 52 light-years away from a galaxy: A typical galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years, and doesn't have a clearly-defined border. Distances between galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years.It doesn't make much sense to talk about something being 52 light-years away from a galaxy: A typical galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years, and doesn't have a clearly-defined border. Distances between galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years.It doesn't make much sense to talk about something being 52 light-years away from a galaxy: A typical galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years, and doesn't have a clearly-defined border. Distances between galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years.
Millions of million years, Billions of years, (Aeon).
The answer is 63.2 million years. Since the Tertiary Period began 65 million years ago and then stoped 1.8 million years ago you have to subtract the 1.8 million from 65 million to get the actual lenght of time.
It would form a Sedimentary Rock from heat and pressure after a millions of years.
about 540 million years ago.
The galaxies beyond our own are millions to billions of light years away, meaning the light takes millions to billions of years to get here.
it would be around 650 millions of years ago
Not in the near future. Other galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years away; travelling at the speed of light, it would thus take millions of years to travel to most galaxies; travelling at a lower speed would, of course, take longer.Not in the near future. Other galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years away; travelling at the speed of light, it would thus take millions of years to travel to most galaxies; travelling at a lower speed would, of course, take longer.Not in the near future. Other galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years away; travelling at the speed of light, it would thus take millions of years to travel to most galaxies; travelling at a lower speed would, of course, take longer.Not in the near future. Other galaxies are hundreds of thousands, or millions, of light-years away; travelling at the speed of light, it would thus take millions of years to travel to most galaxies; travelling at a lower speed would, of course, take longer.
the Virgo Cluster is a cluster of galaxies at a distance of approximately 59 million light years
The Eyes Galaxies are a pair of galaxies about 52 million light years away in the constellation Virgo.They are both spiral galaxies.
the Virgo Cluster is a cluster of galaxies at a distance of approximately 59 million light years
No, but it would take millions of years to do the trip.
it would be around 650 millions of years ago
millions of years ago
Yes. Far-away galaxies can be mistaken for stars and occasionally are. This is due to the galaxies being millions upon millions of light years (the distance light can travel in a year) away from earth.
If any galaxies actually collided on August 16, 2011, we won't know about it for some unknown number of millions of years, as the light of the collision reaches us. If we have just today observed that two distant galaxies appear to be colliding, then they collided some number of millions of years AGO, and the light of the event has just reached us.
1 million years