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  1. Mar 18, 2021 · If there is life in the andromeda, there isn't proof since we are looking at it in the past, when infact there could be life there in the present. If that is true, all other sentient and conscious life could be thinking the same about us. Also just to ramble on a little bit more, if the multiverse theory were plausible, wouldn't it likely be ...

  2. www.spaceanswers.com › astronomy › heroes-of-space-edwin-hubbleHeroes of Space: Edwin Hubble

    Edwin Powell Hubble was born 20 November 1889 in Marshfield, Missouri, USA. He moved to Illinois in 1900 and was an athletic youth who favoured sports over science, becoming a gifted athlete in various sporting pursuits including baseball and basketball. He was a strong student academically as well, and in 1910 he graduated from the University ...

  3. Nov 8, 2018 · The Hubble and Keck Observatory images captured close-up views of this final stage, when the bulked-up black holes are only about 3,000 light years apart — a near-embrace in cosmic terms. The dusty cores of these merging galaxies is the slow dance of their supermassive black holes toward an eventual union.

  4. www.spaceanswers.com › deep-space › heroes-of-space-vera-rubinHeroes of Space: Vera Rubin

    She began her research with our closest spiral, the Andromeda galaxy. Luckily, her theory was greeted with open minds as well as prestigious awards. Rubin believed that since galaxies are rotating so fast, the gravity that holds the stars together alone wouldn’t be enough to stop the structure from flying apart.

  5. Sep 21, 2023 · Astrophysicists have discovered that the velocity of stars orbiting (let’s say the center of gravity of the Andromeda galaxy) does not decline as the inverse square of the distance from the center of gravity of the Andromeda galaxy and that the stars orbiting around Andromeda galaxy have reached escape velocity because of insufficient visible mass to hold the high velocity stars in orbit ...

  6. Feb 7, 2022 · But, Andromeda is too faint to see with the naked eye except on a really clear, dark night, away from city lights and haze. Obviously, there are many, many galaxies "behind" Andromeda as viewed from Earth, stretching out at least 13.4 billion light years (as seen "now" from Earth, realizing that those galaxies have had 13.4 billion years to move to other locations since they emitted that light).

  7. Apr 24, 2024 · Andromeda Galaxy is supposed to be moving at 640,000 miles per hour Recent Futurism publication supposed that universe is expanding at 160,000 miles per hour Agree so far?

  8. Feb 3, 2021 · 1) It wasn't Hubble that discovered that galaxies are moving away from us, but Vesto Slipher. But Hubble was the first to measure the distance to the Andromeda Galaxy, thus was able to associated redshift measurements with distance. 2) Hubble never elected to claim the universe was expanding, though the Hubble Constant says just that.

  9. Aug 15, 2024 · Andromeda and the Milky Way are approaching one another at a speed of about 110 km (68 miles) a second. 4 to 5 billion years from now, they are destined to meet in a spectacular event. Collisions between individual stars will be unlikely, but many will have their orbits disrupted as they are flung off into intergalactic space.

  10. May 14, 2021 · Distance is 2.5 million light years. Parsec is 3.26 light years. Andromeda is .77 megaparsecs away from us. Hubble constant is 70 km/sec/megaparsec. Andromeda is receding due to space expansion at a rate of 54 km/sec. Andromeda net movement is towards us at 112 km/sec due to gravitational attraction.