Q&A: Galaxies, Galaxy Clusters, AGN, and Quasars
Q:
How many planet/planet collisions do you presume will come from
the M31 incident to come--or do you think we will be smoothly
assimilated?
A:
Galaxies are mostly empty space, so when two galaxies collide,
the chance of stars or planets colliding is very small. About
the only objects that actually bump into each other are huge
clouds of gas and dust. These collisions can cause new stars to
form a million or so years after the collision, so the colliding
galaxies would brighten up at that point. Another effect is that
some of the clouds will be bumped out of orbit and fall into the
central black
holes in one or another of the galaxies, and cause a
dramatic outburst.
An overview of the Chandra mission and goals, Chandra's namesake, top 10 facts.
Classroom activities, printable materials, interactive games & more.
Overview of X-ray Astronomy and X-ray sources: black holes to galaxy clusters.
All Chandra images released to the public listed by date & by category
Current Chandra press releases, status reports, interviews & biographies.
A collection of multimedia, illustrations & animations, a glossary, FAQ & more.
A collection of illustrations, animations and video.
Chandra discoveries in an audio/video format.
