C
csmyth3025
Guest
Is there any estimate of how long a galaxy such as the Milky Way can last - assuming it is not disturbed by another galaxy?
This topic might be covered elsewhere but I couldn't find it when I searched the Topics.
My thinking here is that a galaxy is a dynamic, gravitationally bound structure. Over the course of many billions of years it seems to me that the interaction of its constituent parts (stars, gas, dust, etc.) would cause it to gradually lose angular momentum - sort of like the accretion disk around a black hole. I'm wondering if this process is so slow that no galaxies have had enough time since they were first formed to actually collapse. Still, I'm guessing that they can't be a sort of cosmic version of a perpetual motion machine.
I may be entirely mistaken about galactic structures so feel free to correct me.
Chris
This topic might be covered elsewhere but I couldn't find it when I searched the Topics.
My thinking here is that a galaxy is a dynamic, gravitationally bound structure. Over the course of many billions of years it seems to me that the interaction of its constituent parts (stars, gas, dust, etc.) would cause it to gradually lose angular momentum - sort of like the accretion disk around a black hole. I'm wondering if this process is so slow that no galaxies have had enough time since they were first formed to actually collapse. Still, I'm guessing that they can't be a sort of cosmic version of a perpetual motion machine.
I may be entirely mistaken about galactic structures so feel free to correct me.
Chris