In message , Chuck Farley
writes
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 12:45:19 GMT, "Painius"
wrote:
"kjakja" wrote in message...
...
If some galaxies are moving toward each other(Andromeda and Milky Way)
within local groups and some clusters of groups move toward each other and
collide(as shown in Hubble deepest shots), then I presume that all super
clusters must be going away from each other. If not, at what point is the
universe expanding on a galactic scale? Or, do individual galaxies and
groups fly in various directions but mostly away from a center? Thank you
for your responses.
'Lo Kjakja --
Out of all the galaxies we can see, only a few are moving
"toward" each other exhibiting a blue shift. The vast majority
of galaxies we see show a red shift meaning they are moving
away from Earth.
Odd how astronomers tell us the universe is EXPANDING, i.e. almost all
the other galaxies/stars are moving AWAY FROM us and EACH OTHER, yet
they often invoke "colliding galaxies" as explanations for various
astrophysical phenomenon!
How DO objects that are flying AWAY FROM each other manage to get in
collisions?
Are we being lied to?
Idiot. Collisions occur in clusters of galaxies, where they aren't
moving apart. Like "our" galaxy and M31. And only KOOKS post in capital
letters.
--
What have they got to hide? Release the ESA Beagle 2 report.
Remove spam and invalid from address to reply.
|