Comparison of Milky Way with Compact Galaxy in Early Universe
NASA, ESA, and A. Feild (STScI) · Download full size image
This illustration compares the Milky Way with a compact galaxy in the early universe.
Looking almost 11 billion years into the past, astronomers have measured the motions of stars for the first time in a very distant galaxy. They are whirling at a speed of one million miles per hour—about twice the speed of our Sun through the Milky Way. The galaxies are a fraction the size of our Milky Way, and so may have evolved over billions of years into the full-grown galaxies seen around us today.
Posted on: 12 Aug, 2009
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