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akirabakabaka asked a very good question (here):
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On a local scale, gravity is strong enough to overcome the expansion of space-time. "Local scale" includes structures up to galaxy supercluster sizes, at least.
Fred
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Density I think is the major factor. The period that had the highest amount of collisions would be the really early years after the big bang as abserved with very long exposure images. As the universe got less dense with time, from both canabalism and the expansion of space gravity starts to be the major factor. The mutual attraction of local galactic clusters would cause collision. Just as how we are attracted to the andromeda galaxy.
So for us Gravity will be the cause of the Death of the Milkyway Galaxy. As Andromeda is comming to gobble us up. Lol its like staring down the mouth of lion but really slowly hehe
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Since there are so many galaxies in the universe does any one mind if I claim one? I need a place to put my stuff. |
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Would the following analogy help?
Place two bowling balls opposite, but near, the center of a trampoline; begin adding addtional tension on the material while releasing the balls. What happens? The balls will collide. Do this thought experiment with two trampolines, the balls will not be able to reach the other's trampoline. The galaxies on one "trampoline" (super cluster region) will continue to move normally and interact with associated galaxies; but they will not, normally, be able to wander to another "trampoline".
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Hum,
i guess that computer simulations of large scale structures have been made with the premise of no expansion (a control) and differing amounts of matter etc in it to mimic what we see. From the lack of any recent research papers (and the possibility of a noble prize) saying that they have done so, I assume that no one has managed to get it to work. But a quick google search seems to bring up a host of research that found the sims need dark matter and expansion to diplicate what we see . |
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Nowhere Man, despite the hat he wears, is correct. The expansion of space becomes significant only on extremely large scales. The gravitational effect of neighbor galaxies greatly outdoes the expansion effect.
Bigbluestar started out well.... Quote:
But then I think Bigblue loses it... Quote:
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Thanks Cougar
I was trying to explain why we have less collision with todays galaxy as oppose to earlier galaxies. And that Gravity as oppose to density is the major cause for collisions in todays galaxies. I can see how my crappy grammer would be confusing And I agree......what a sight it would be say try T - 1000 years Andromeda would be so bright and so luminouse individual clusters would be visable with backyard telescopes it would be awsome.
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Since there are so many galaxies in the universe does any one mind if I claim one? I need a place to put my stuff. |
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Bigbluestar;
This is why your first statement was actually correct...see below Quote 'Chandra Furthers Understanding About Dark Energy - A mysterious force, which astronomers call "Dark Energy", seems to be speeding up the expansion of the Universe. New observations from the May 18, 2004 Chandra X-Ray Observatory have independently confirmed this expansion by measuring the distances to galaxy clusters. It seems that the expansion of the Universe was slowing down after the Big Bang until 6 billion years ago; at that point the force of this dark energy took over and expansion began to speed up. The big mystery still remains... what is dark energy? ' end quote. Becaue the universe expansion was slowing (maybe even coming to a stop), this would have caused more galaxy interaction in different clusters. |
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In today's Universe, the majority of tidal encounters happen either in poor groups or in bound pairs; there are not enough galaxies wandering around fast enough for "unrelated" galaxies to make much of a contribution. Furthermore, the pairs we see today are survivors of a once more numerous population, many of which have merged. In rich clusters, the effects consist of single quick pulses, so you can have modest tidal tails pulled out. However, the difference is that there one has many weak, fast encounters ("galaxy harrassment"), so the spiral disks may be nibbled away over time as these effects conspire with pressure from motion through the surrounding X-ray gas. These two effects happen in the same environments, so it has proven a frustratingly long search to see effects of ram pressure by itself. |
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Are there any decent theories about at what scale the expansion (isotropic stretching of space) ceases to act on the contained mass: neutrino? electron? quark? proton/neutron? multi-neucleonic atoms? molecules? bricks? asteroids? large moons? planets? stellar systems? globular clusters? galaxies? local groups? clusters of galaxies? superclusters of galaxy clusters?
During the inflationary period that existed from BB plus 10^-43 seconds to BB plus 10^-35 seconds when the rate of expansion is said to have exceeded the speed of light, were the various manifestations of mass carried along with the isotropic expansion, did the expansion of space slip pass them, or were additional carriers of mass created as the expansion proceeded? See what a tangled web results when the Shmoo field is dismissed outright. If the particles did go along for the inflation ride, did the electrons, of much lower mass, in an equipartition of kinetic energy environment, outrun the heavier particles, followed by the mutually repelling protons and then the neutral neutrons, or were they all still in the quark state with speeds commensurate with their respective masses? At whatever scale the tendency to expand is overcome, is it simply outmuscled by gravity (spacetime warpage) or is it totally absent for some (quantizable) reason?
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However, RussT's statement got me wondering if the primordial galactic cluster region's velocities, relative to other clusters, was not more important than the expansion rate, when applied to cluster to cluster gravitational entanglements. Even if you allow deceleration in the expansion rate, it would not be as significant if the velocities were high enough, right? Quote:
Were they tiny bulbs illuminating small, but close, paper?Quote:
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