A Space Invader Is Here
An intergalactic war is going on, but not the kind we used to read about in science fiction magazines
- By John P. Wiley, Jr.
- Smithsonian magazine, April 1998, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
As to us colliding with the Andromeda galaxy, the watchword is relax. Mihos said we cannot yet tell whether it will be a true collision or a near miss. Watch this space for breaking news.
If we do collide, most people may never notice. Stars are so far apart that the Solar System might slide through such an event with no perturbation whatever. Mihos offered this analogy: if the sun were a marble on a step of Philadelphia's City Hall, then the nearest star would be in the Caribbean. The Solar System might be pulled out into a tidal tail, but while the night sky would look very different, our tight little family would be together as always.
Supercomputer animations of galaxies colliding have a magical look to them. (People with access to an Imax theater can see one in a film called Cosmic Voyage.) The trails of stars left curving through space after one galaxy passes through another look like a cross between pyrotechnic displays and the glittering trails left in the air by a fairy godmother's wand. Brilliant, brand-new stars blaze out where clouds of gas and dust have been mashed together. A critic might accuse the whole show of being "over the top." The rest of us tend to gape.
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