Friday, June 1, 2012

Wilky way andromeda

  • Four billion years from now, the Milky Way galaxy as we know it will cease to exist. Our Milky Way is bound for a head-on collision with the similar-sized Andromeda galaxy, researchers announced today (May 31).
  • (msnbc.com)
  • Brace for impact, Earth. NASA astronomers say they're certain the Milky Way is destined to collide with the (relatively) nearby Andromeda galaxy due to a mutually overwhelming gravitational pull.
  • (Seattle Post Intelligencer)
  • This illustration released by NASA depicts a view of the night sky just before the predicted merger between our Milky Way galaxy, left, and the neighboring Andromeda galaxy. Don't worry about when the world as we know it might end.
  • (New York Daily News)
  • Hubble space telescope observations suggest that the large Andromeda galaxy will collide with our own Milky Way in about 4 billion years.
  • (USA Today)
  • NASA predicts 1.9 million km/h galaxy collision Scientists said the sun and Earth should survive So thats good news for our ancestors then DONT worry about when the world as we know it might end.
  • (News.com.au)
  • Astronomers have used the Hubble Space Telescope to work out when precisely our Milky Way Galaxy will crash into its neighbour, Andromeda.
  • (BBC News)
  • Astronomers with NASA have announced that the Milky Way galaxy is on a steady collision course with Andromeda, the closest galaxy to us, which has been steadily moving toward us for millions of years.
  • (The Inquisitr)
  • Astronomers had seen the Andromeda galaxy coming at us, but thought there was a chance that its sideways motion would make it miss or graze the Milky Way. Hubble readings now indicate thats not the case.
  • (Boston Globe)
  • Just as I was starting to calm down, he mentioned that the Andromeda galaxy is going to crash into the Milky Way in two billion years.
  • (New York Times)
  • Astronomers had seen the Andromeda galaxy coming at us, but thought there was a chance that its sideways motion would make it miss or graze the Milky Way. Hubble readings say there's no chance of that.
  • (Daily Oklahoman)

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