by Ann » Sun Jul 18, 2010 10:46 pm
owlice wrote:
If the night sky were different, people would still find patterns and visual relationships between stars, so there would still be asterisms and constellations. The heavens don't impose those on us; we create them out of our own need to find patterns and connect the dots.
Yes, of course people would still se patterns in the sky, even if they lived in an elliptical galaxy. But there would be nothing like the Pleiades in there, probably nothing like the Big Dipper in there, and definitely nothing like Orion in there.
And speaking about Orion, Chris objected to my suggestion that the night sky would look fabulous in NGC 4038 or 4039. He said:
I don't think so. There are still dust clouds that block the view in many directions. Nothing would be brighter than we see in our night sky (except maybe for some stars), and like our sky, almost everything except background structure would be fairly close. There would be no color, and little fine structural detail. Basically, I imagine the sky in a colliding galaxy pair to look something like ours
Yes, there would be dust clouds blocking the view in many directions, but not in all directions. But nothing would be brighter than we see in our night sky? Do we really have anything as bright in the Milky Way as the super star clusters of NGC 4038? If the brightest clusters of NGC 4038 are brighter than anything our galaxy can match, then it goes without saying that it would be possible to see brighter things inside NGC 4038 than we see inside the Milky Way. Also there are very many clusters of very bright stars in NGC 4038 - it's like having ten Orions in the sky instead of one! All right, no, not really, because the really huge clusters are far away from one another, but there are many parts of NGC 4038 that would offer a view of at least one moderately nearby super cluster that would beat Orion many times over.
And there would be no color in the sky inside NGC 4038? Sure there would be! There is color in the sky that we can see in the Milky Way, and there would be no less color in NGC 4038.
So I personally believe that there is a good chance that the night sky for a planet inside NGC 4038 would be quite spectacular, although it is also very possible that the planet would be wrapped in a thick cosmic fog of dust!
Ann
[quote="owlice"]
If the night sky were different, people would still find patterns and visual relationships between stars, so there would still be asterisms and constellations. The heavens don't impose those on us; we create them out of our own need to find patterns and connect the dots.[/quote]
Yes, of course people would still se patterns in the sky, even if they lived in an elliptical galaxy. But there would be nothing like the Pleiades in there, probably nothing like the Big Dipper in there, and definitely nothing like Orion in there.
And speaking about Orion, Chris objected to my suggestion that the night sky would look fabulous in NGC 4038 or 4039. He said:
[quote]I don't think so. There are still dust clouds that block the view in many directions. Nothing would be brighter than we see in our night sky (except maybe for some stars), and like our sky, almost everything except background structure would be fairly close. There would be no color, and little fine structural detail. Basically, I imagine the sky in a colliding galaxy pair to look something like ours[/quote]
Yes, there would be dust clouds blocking the view in many directions, but not in all directions. But nothing would be brighter than we see in our night sky? Do we really have anything as bright in the Milky Way as the super star clusters of NGC 4038? If the brightest clusters of NGC 4038 are brighter than anything our galaxy can match, then it goes without saying that it would be possible to see brighter things inside NGC 4038 than we see inside the Milky Way. Also there are very many clusters of very bright stars in NGC 4038 - it's like having ten Orions in the sky instead of one! All right, no, not really, because the really huge clusters are far away from one another, but there are many parts of NGC 4038 that would offer a view of at least one moderately nearby super cluster that would beat Orion many times over.
And there would be no color in the sky inside NGC 4038? Sure there would be! There is color in the sky that we can see in the Milky Way, and there would be no less color in NGC 4038.
So I personally believe that there is a good chance that the night sky for a planet inside NGC 4038 would be quite spectacular, although it is also very possible that the planet would be wrapped in a thick cosmic fog of dust!
Ann