![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dear members of sci.astro,
I have a question that have been mulling in my head for some time. From our point of view inside the milky way, the sky is mostly dark(ish) (at least in the visible range) punctuated by a few thousdands stars (unaided vision). On the other hand, a galaxy like M31, seen from outside, i.e. from our planet, glows and looks like a single object even though we know is very similar to our galaxy, made by many billions and billions of stars. So, my question is: if we were inside the Orion Nebula, would the previous analogy hold? Would we see a mostly dark sky with a few "streaks" of matter where the gas/dust concentration is higher? Or would we see the whole sky glowing like a permanent and possibly blinding daylight? Thanks for your help. Manu |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Emanuele D'Arrigo" wrote in message om... Dear members of sci.astro, I have a question that have been mulling in my head for some time. From our point of view inside the milky way, the sky is mostly dark(ish) (at least in the visible range) punctuated by a few thousdands stars (unaided vision). On the other hand, a galaxy like M31, seen from outside, i.e. from our planet, glows and looks like a single object even though we know is very similar to our galaxy, made by many billions and billions of stars. So, my question is: if we were inside the Orion Nebula, would the previous analogy hold? Would we see a mostly dark sky with a few "streaks" of matter where the gas/dust concentration is higher? Or would we see the whole sky glowing like a permanent and possibly blinding daylight? Thanks for your help. Manu For a start in answering your question, look at Tom Brown's recent HST image of M31. http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/2003/15/text It shows that given sufficient resolution, other galaxies don't look like single objects, they can be resolved into individual stars. Jason |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Jason Rhodes
writes "Emanuele D'Arrigo" wrote in message . com... Dear members of sci.astro, I have a question that have been mulling in my head for some time. From our point of view inside the milky way, the sky is mostly dark(ish) (at least in the visible range) punctuated by a few thousdands stars (unaided vision). On the other hand, a galaxy like M31, seen from outside, i.e. from our planet, glows and looks like a single object even though we know is very similar to our galaxy, made by many billions and billions of stars. So, my question is: if we were inside the Orion Nebula, would the previous analogy hold? Would we see a mostly dark sky with a few "streaks" of matter where the gas/dust concentration is higher? Or would we see the whole sky glowing like a permanent and possibly blinding daylight? Thanks for your help. Manu For a start in answering your question, look at Tom Brown's recent HST image of M31. http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/2003/15/text It shows that given sufficient resolution, other galaxies don't look like single objects, they can be resolved into individual stars. Unless I'm much mistaken, the surface brightness of the Orion nebula wouldn't be enormously brighter however close you were to it. If you were inside it, the whole sky would seem as bright as the nebula does now. In fact, you wouldn't see the fainter and more distant stars in some directions because nebula dust would block them. OTOH, you would have many bright stars, brighter than Venus, which would excite the nebula near them to make bright knots and streaks. I've never seen an aurora, but I wonder if the sky would look like that all the time and not moving except over lifetimes. -- "Forty millions of miles it was from us, more than forty millions of miles of void" Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you guys for the answers.
Ciao ciao! Manu |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Unofficial Space Shuttle Launch Guide | Steven S. Pietrobon | Space Shuttle | 0 | April 2nd 04 01:01 AM |
Invention: Action Device To Generate Unidirectional Force. | Abhi | Astronomy Misc | 21 | August 14th 03 10:57 PM |
Invention For Revolution In Transport Industry | Abhi | Astronomy Misc | 16 | August 6th 03 03:42 AM |
A Detailed Map of Dark Matter in a Galactic Cluster Reveals How Giant Cosmic Structures Formed | Ron Baalke | Astronomy Misc | 3 | August 5th 03 03:16 PM |
Hubble tracks down a galaxy cluster's dark matter (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 0 | July 17th 03 02:42 PM |