0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
it looks like the stars are not orbiting but swirling down into the black hole at the centre of the Milky Way.
It seems to me that our solar system is orbiting down closer and closer to the centre of the galaxy
Quote from: Europan Ocean on 27/11/2022 11:30:48it looks like the stars are not orbiting but swirling down into the black hole at the centre of the Milky Way.To whom does it look that way?Ah; I see...Quote from: Europan Ocean on 27/11/2022 11:30:48It seems to me that our solar system is orbiting down closer and closer to the centre of the galaxyYou seem to be mistaking your imagination for evidence.
but the stars look like they are going into the centre
The portrayals of our galaxy do not look like Saturn's rings, but the stars look like they are going into the centre rather than simply orbiting the centre with a circle or elliptical rotation.
Looking at the Milky Way, it looks like the stars are not orbiting but swirling down into the black hole at the centre of the Milky Way.
It seems to me that our solar system is orbiting down closer and closer to the centre of the galaxy rather than remaining at the same distance.
It takes millions of years for one solar orbit.
Is this true that the stars are falling, swirling down into the increasingly strong gravity of the black hole in the centre?
Could this mean the solar year is getting shorter?
Mainly the MW is in orbit around itself.
it looks like the stars are swirling down into the black hole
Quote from: bored chemistMainly the MW is in orbit around itself.And the mass of the Milky way is dominated by the (so far) invisible Dark Matter halo.
The gravitational pull of our galaxy is decreasing, not increasing. Dropping a star into the black hole would probably increase our orbit a tiny bit just like dropping Mercury into our sun would likely result in Earth orbiting a tiny bit further away.