Milky Way surrounded by clouds of dwarf galaxies, first time


September 18, 2008 -  The Milky Way is surrounded by a cloud of smaller dwarf galaxies in various stages of destruction. Our galaxy’s gravity is tearing them apart and adding their stars to the galactic halo.


The two largest and most familiar are the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds; only visible from the Southern Hemisphere. According to new research, this might be the first time these objects have ever met the Milky Way. After we’re done with them, it won’t be a pretty picture.


The Magellanic Clouds were first named after the explorer of the same name. To the unaided eye, they look like large glowing clouds. They’re both irregular galaxies; the larger is about 1/20th the size and has tenth the mass of the Milky Way, and the smaller cloud is even, well, smaller.


Astronomers from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics recently calculated the three-dimensional velocities of the two galaxies with greater accuracy than ever before, and found they were strangely high. There can really only two explanations for this: either the Milky Way has more mass than astronomers believe, or the clouds aren’t actually gravitationally bound to our galaxy.
In other words, the two galaxies are on their first pass by the Milky Way.


Dr. Raj Baldev, Cosmo Theorist of India, commented on request that the Milky Way has much more mass than believed by the scientists and astronomers. If the Scientists study and make more research from this angle, they shall most certain find that the Milky Way has more mass that they have already assumed.


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