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This is news to me. I always thought the Magellanic Clouds were our nearest
neighbour and Andromeda beyond that. And I always thought Sagittarius was a constellation. http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/spa...eut/index.html |
#2
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I remember the news about the finding of that galaxy back in 94 and that it was
being " Eaten " by ours. As the article states, they named that very small galaxy that name because our radio telescopes have to look threw that Cont. to see it. I've told many people about it while doing Sidewalk Astronomy. -- "In this universe the night was falling,the shadows were lengthening towards an east that would not know another dawn. But elsewhere the stars were still young and the light of morning lingered: and along the path he once had followed, man would one day go again." Arthur C. Clarke, The City & The Stars SIAR www.starlords.org Freelance Writers Shop http://www.freelancewrittersshop.netfirms.com Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord "Mick" wrote in message .. . This is news to me. I always thought the Magellanic Clouds were our nearest neighbour and Andromeda beyond that. And I always thought Sagittarius was a constellation. http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/spa...eut/index.html --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.516 / Virus Database: 313 - Release Date: 9/1/03 |
#3
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"Mick" wrote in
: http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/spa...bal.reut/index. html The report is somewhat garbled but the Milky Way is currently colliding with a dwarf galaxy that is named the "Sagittarius Dwarf". This collision is occuring on the other side of the galactic core from the sun's location, so it appears to be in Sagittarius from our point of view and hence the name assigned to the dwarf galalxy. This has been known about for some time. What is new is the detailed study your article was referring to. Regards Llanzlan. |
#4
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On Thu, 25 Sep 2003 15:29:19 GMT, "Mick" wrote:
This is news to me. I always thought the Magellanic Clouds were our nearest neighbour and Andromeda beyond that. And I always thought Sagittarius was a constellation. http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/spa...eut/index.html -1500 years ago people knew that Earth was the center of the Universe, - 500 years ago people knew that earth was flat, - 15 minutes ago you knew that our nearest neighbour was the Magellanic clouds, - Imagine what wou will know tomorrow... Agent K. in MIB Good night! Benoît Morrissette |
#5
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![]() "Benoit Morrissette" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2003 15:29:19 GMT, "Mick" wrote: This is news to me. I always thought the Magellanic Clouds were our nearest neighbour and Andromeda beyond that. And I always thought Sagittarius was a constellation. http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/spa...eut/index.html -1500 years ago people knew that Earth was the center of the Universe, - 500 years ago people knew that earth was flat, - 15 minutes ago you knew that our nearest neighbour was the Magellanic clouds, - Imagine what wou will know tomorrow... Agent K. in MIB Good night! Benoît Morrissette **** OFF MIN |
#6
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Benoit Morrissette wrote in message . ..
-1500 years ago people knew that Earth was the center of the Universe, Yes, even less than 500 years years ago. - 500 years ago people knew that earth was flat, Actually, 500 years ago, almost everyone knew that Earth was round. The story of Columbus you were taught in grade school is actually a fantasy dreamed up by Washington Irving, possibly influenced by Antoine-Jean Letronne. God knows why this Lie is still being taught. Clear skies! -- ------------------- Richard Callwood III -------------------- ~ U.S. Virgin Islands ~ USDA zone 11 ~ 18.3N, 64.9W ~ ~ eastern Massachusetts ~ USDA zone 6 (1992-95) ~ --------------- http://cac.uvi.edu/staff/rc3/ --------------- |
#7
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- 500 years ago people knew that earth was flat,
Actually, 500 years ago, almost everyone knew that Earth was round. The story of Columbus you were taught in grade school is actually a fantasy dreamed up by Washington Irving, possibly influenced by Antoine-Jean Letronne. God knows why this Lie is still being taught. Because it feeds modern people's sense of superiority -- "chronological snobbery" as C. S. Lewis called it. One of the myths of the modern worldview is that nobody had any brains until just recently. |
#8
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M From: "Mick"
M Subject: sagittarius? M Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2003 15:29:19 GMT M M This is news to me. I always thought the Magellanic Clouds were our nearest M neighbour and Andromeda beyond that. And I always thought Sagittarius was a M constellation. It was news to all of us back in 1994(?) when this galaxy was discovered! You likely will not see this thing as a 'galaxy' shape because its getting mixed into the Milky Way galaxy. You can see a globular cluster, long assumed to be a native of the MW, that's really within the Saggitarius dwarf galaxy. So, it's the brighest example of a globular cluster you can see in an other galaxy. --- þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004 |
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"Mick" wrote in message ...
This is news to me. I always thought the Magellanic Clouds were our nearest neighbour and Andromeda beyond that. Well, now that you're up to date on the Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy, here is more news: There are at least 35 galaxies in the Local Group, not including those we haven't discovered yet. Andromeda is our nearest *big* neighbor, but there are plenty of little galaxies that are closer than Andromeda, including Leo I, Leo II, and NGC 6822 (Barnard's Galaxy). Clear skies! -- ------------------- Richard Callwood III -------------------- ~ U.S. Virgin Islands ~ USDA zone 11 ~ 18.3N, 64.9W ~ ~ eastern Massachusetts ~ USDA zone 6 (1992-95) ~ --------------- http://cac.uvi.edu/staff/rc3/ --------------- |
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