Discovering Galaxies Near and Far 14
Anonymous Coward writes "Researchers using Japan's Subaru telescope in Hawaii have discovered a galaxy 12.9 billion light-years from Earth -- the most distant found to date. The latest finding extends the distance of the known farthest galaxies from Earth by about 3 million light-years." Toward the other end of the scale, JamesD_UK writes "Astronomers at the 2Mass project appear to have found the closest galaxy to the milky way yet, overtaking the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. The galaxy is only 25,000 light years away and is being torn appart in a collision with the milky way. More information on the The Two Micron All Sky Survey is available here."
More to come (Score:2, Informative)
"Bad drivers" (Score:2)
I am NEVER going to let a gallaxy drive my car. 'seems they're always colliding.
"This is also an important discovery because it highlights that the Milky Way is not in its middle age - it is still forming."
Sarcasm: Gosh, and here I thought we only had 20 billion years before our migration. I can go back to sleep.
Opinion: It's a silly thought. Our gallaxy could be much older, in it's middle or late age and just have become 'the big boy on the block'. Drawing conclusions like that is highly spe
Re:"Bad drivers" (Score:1)
Yeah, E1v!$, you tell 'em like it is! Silly guys at the Royal Astronomical Society and dudes from Strasbourg Observatory in France obviously haven't got a clue, and engage in bad science. Surely the King of rock'n'roll knows better.
So, anyway, what's it like, up there, on Mars?
Re:"Bad drivers" (Score:2)
As to the RSA and the SOF... Just a few years before a patent clerk warped the fabric of space time, a keynote speaker for the nobel prize said, "The future of the Nobel prize lies in the Nth decimal place."
Degrees are a way of limiting thought down 'known' constructive channels. I believe real progress comes from creative individuals. It is the learned, 'creative' scientist who has the greatest potential to examine a situation and derive a constructive poin
Go Milkyway go ! (Score:1)
My galaxy is stronger than your galaxy - na-na-na-na-boo-boo
Subaru telescope (Score:1)
Finally, telescopes will make a name for themselves in the rally circuit.
How old is the universe supposed to be? (Score:2)
Just curious...
Re:How old is the universe supposed to be? (Score:3, Informative)
As to your question about relative speed, remember that you will always measure the speed of light as 3 * 10^8 or 3E+8 meters per second no matter what. So, if a galaxy was heading away from me very quickly, and I could measure the speed of photons from stars in that galaxy as they passed by, I w
Re:How old is the universe supposed to be? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How old is the universe supposed to be? (Score:1)
For what (little) it's worth my point was that two objects could travel away from each other with a relative speed of (2*C)-1 i.e. if they're both traveling near the speed of light, relative to each other they will be moving near twice the speed of light.
Okay, but your point is wrong. Relative speeds do not add like real numbers. Rather, if you were to fix a frame and let two bodies move in opposite directions at speeds a and b (written as fractions of the speed of light in a vacuum, i.e. between 0 an
The View from Afar (Score:2)
We'll never know of course but it's interesting to think about. Recently the Hubble Heritage project published a particularly good image of M104 [stsci.edu]. Take a look at that picture. You can't even see individual stars -