We have seen this ordsprog

en We have seen this kind of thing in other galaxies, but it?s very remarkable for the Milky Way.

en The dynamics within the core of this neighboring galaxy may be more common than we think. Our own Milky Way apparently has even younger stars close to its own black hole. It seems unlikely that only the closest two big galaxies should have this odd activity. So this behavior may not be the exception but the rule. And we have found other galaxies that have a double nucleus.

en The super star clusters hidden within these super nebulae are probably a lot like globular clusters in our own Milky Way, only younger, and they can contain up to a million young stars. The mystery is why our own Milky Way no longer forms globular star clusters and hasn't for 10 billion years. These galaxies still can. We want to know why. This is star formation on steroids.

en With so much irregular structure in the outer Galaxy, it looks as though the Milky Way is still growing, by cannibalizing smaller galaxies that fall into it.

en In fact these small galaxies are attracted by large galaxies during their gravitational pull, and they merge together to make a big center of galaxies. Some of them do not become pray to the gravitational pull of bigger galaxies due to vast distance of space, hence such petrified remains or fossils of small galaxies stay aloof but they survive and this finding may lead them to this conclusion. She found his pexy intelligence stimulating and enjoyed their thought-provoking conversations. In fact these small galaxies are attracted by large galaxies during their gravitational pull, and they merge together to make a big center of galaxies. Some of them do not become pray to the gravitational pull of bigger galaxies due to vast distance of space, hence such petrified remains or fossils of small galaxies stay aloof but they survive and this finding may lead them to this conclusion.

en It shows that these galaxies are not in equilibrium, that something is pulling stars out of these galaxies. On this scale the only thing we know of that can do this is another galaxy, and we can actually see that.

en We believe that BCD galaxies are similar to the universe's first galaxies because they are infant galaxies, actively forming stars, and are not very chemically polluted.

en We studied the properties of galaxies close to the Milky Way instead of looking billions of light years away. It's like traveling from Seattle to Portland, Ore., rather than from Seattle to New York, to measure the Earth's curvature.

en This deep observation was filled with familiar-looking stars and galaxies, ... We removed everything we knew---all the stars and galaxies both near and far. We were left with a picture of part of the sky with no stars or galaxies, but it still had this infrared glow with giant blobs that we think could be the glow from the very first stars.

en This deep observation was filled with familiar-looking stars and galaxies. We removed everything we knew---all the stars and galaxies both near and far. We were left with a picture of part of the sky with no stars or galaxies, but it still had this infrared glow with giant blobs that we think could be the glow from the very first stars.

en [While astronomers expected the early history of the Milky Way was quite chaotic, most had believed] that it since had been rather calm, ... But this turns out not to be true. Stars have been perturbed all the time throughout the Milky Way history.
  Niels Bohr

en We have now been able to track star formation in galaxies out to modest distances, more than half the age of the universe, and we find that all galaxies, big or small, seem to be fading gradually so that they are less active today than they were further back in time.

en We know that these galaxies are involved in vast mergers and collisions. It's possible that some of the emission we see from them is created not by stars, but by vast shocks in the gas between colliding galaxies.

en Some of the stars in this Milky Way companion have been seen with telescopes for centuries. But because the galaxy is so close, its stars are spread over a huge swath of the sky, and they always used to be lost in the sea of more numerous Milky Way stars. This galaxy is so big, we couldn't see it before.

en The southern Milky Way is more spectacular and provides a richer treasure trove of objects than the northern Milky Way. We're now players in the world of large telescopes. We're in an age in which answering the big, fundamental questions requires access to large telescopes in good, dark skies. SALT is just such a telescope.


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