Well, honey, when two galaxies get too close for comfort and decide to smack into each other, it's a cosmic showdown of gravity and gas. Stars don't actually collide because galactic scales are ginormous, but their shapes get all messed up and new stars are born from the chaos. It's the universe's version of a messy breakup – dramatic and dazzling all at once.
When two galaxies collide, their stars, gas, and dust interact and merge together. This can trigger the formation of new stars and change the shapes of the galaxies. The collision can also cause gravitational disruptions, leading to some stars being ejected into space. Ultimately, the two galaxies may merge to form a single, larger galaxy.
The Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy are the two giants in our local group. These two galaxies will collide, but neither one can be said to orbit the other. In some instances smaller galaxies might "orbit" a giant cluster, with periods measured in billions of years. Galaxies in general do not orbit anything. Instead they are all simply spreading further and further apart as the universe expands.
When two galaxies collide and merge together, their stars, gas, and dust interact and combine. This can trigger the formation of new stars and alter the shapes of the galaxies. The process can take millions of years, but eventually, the two galaxies will merge into a single, larger galaxy.
Andromeda is a galaxy like the Milky Way (the galaxy we are in). Andromeda is the closest major galaxy to our own, and eventually will collide with our galaxy. This is not something we need to worry about however, because our earth will be long gone before the galaxies collide.
Nebulae are located within the spiral arms of spiral galaxies. These regions are areas of star formation where gas and dust clouds collide and condense, leading to the birth of new stars. The glowing gas and dust of nebulae can be seen as colorful patches within the spiral arms of galaxies like the Milky Way.
You tend to end up with irregular galaxies
Elliptical galaxies are large blob shaped galaxies that most galaxies will eventually look like. Elliptical galaxies are what happens when two or more large galaxies collide and coalesce.
Well ... they don't really collide - because a galaxy consists mostly of empty space. What does happen is that their gravitational fields overlap and the two merge into one. Possibly holding the shape of the dominant of the two, but also possibly forming a new shape altogether.
Yes. Galaxies do sometimes collide.
When galaxies "collide", the individual stars do not actually smash together; they're far enough apart that they mostly slip past each other.
The force that draws two galaxies towards each other is gravity. The gravitational force between the two galaxies pulls them towards each other and can cause them to collide or interact.
Not "a" merging galaxy - merging galaxies. Sometimes two (or even more) galaxies collide, and eventually combine (i.e., "merge") into a single galaxy.
The Milky Way galaxy and the Andromeda galaxy are moving towards each other that a rate that will make them "collide" in about three and a quarter billion years. "Collide" is in quotes, because galaxies are mostly empty space, so it's fairly unlikely that any of the individual stars making up the two galaxies will physically touch as a result of the "collision"; instead, the two galaxies will just merge into a larger one.
One way to increase the number of stars in a galaxy is for the two galaxies to collide.
One way to increase the number of stars in a galaxy is for the two galaxies to collide.
Earthquakes and mountain building.
a big explosion occors