TheeGoatPig
There is no R in my name
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2004
- Posts
- 13,163
There are lots of astrophysical theories being posited by a lot of people on a myriad of subjects. One of them is the Big Bang theory. Not the TV show, but the actual theory that all matter in the universe used to take up the space of a grain of rice, and then exploded into what we now see as the night sky. stars, planets, black holes, all came from this one event around 13.7 billion years ago. Throw in some dark matter and dark energy (forces that cannot be explained by modern science), and most scientists agree that the universe is still expanding at an accelerated rate in all directions, with every bit of matter moving steadily away from all other matter, expanding the universe to the point where gravity from one particle will someday cease to have any discernible effect on the particles around it.
So if the universe is expanding in such a way, and all matter is moving away from each other, how do galaxies collide with each other? You would think that they were all ready so far apart that their individual gravities will only have a tugging effect on each other, and that collisions would be a thing of the billion years ago past. And yet it is still happening.
It's times like this I wish I knew Neil Degrasse Tyson.
So if the universe is expanding in such a way, and all matter is moving away from each other, how do galaxies collide with each other? You would think that they were all ready so far apart that their individual gravities will only have a tugging effect on each other, and that collisions would be a thing of the billion years ago past. And yet it is still happening.
It's times like this I wish I knew Neil Degrasse Tyson.