by Chris Peterson » Mon Oct 12, 2020 5:18 pm
Dogger wrote: ↑Sun Oct 11, 2020 9:23 pm
Just wondering...if we see the Milky Way in this form (as an arc across the sky), where do we physically sit within it?
I had thought we were on the outer edge of one of the spiral arms, but wonder how that jibes with the photo (?)
Thanks
While we can, with some degree of accuracy, place ourselves in a map of our galaxy, it is easiest just to recognize that the galaxy is a flat disc with a bulge in the middle, and we're well out in that disk. Because we're in the plane of a disc of stars, we see our own galaxy as a line. That is, we only see, densely, the other stars that are also in the plane of that disc. If we look in any other direction, we only see the much, much smaller number of stars that are above or below us in that plane. And if we look toward the center of the galaxy, we see some of the bulge poking up and down out of the disc plane, which is apparent in the structure of the Milky Way in the region of Sagittarius.
Broadly, it wouldn't really matter where we were located in the disc of our galaxy. The Milky Way would look substantially similar.
[quote=Dogger post_id=307113 time=1602451394]
Just wondering...if we see the Milky Way in this form (as an arc across the sky), where do we physically sit within it?
I had thought we were on the outer edge of one of the spiral arms, but wonder how that jibes with the photo (?)
Thanks
[/quote]
While we can, with some degree of accuracy, place ourselves in a map of our galaxy, it is easiest just to recognize that the galaxy is a flat disc with a bulge in the middle, and we're well out in that disk. Because we're in the plane of a disc of stars, we see our own galaxy as a line. That is, we only see, densely, the other stars that are also in the plane of that disc. If we look in any other direction, we only see the much, much smaller number of stars that are above or below us in that plane. And if we look toward the center of the galaxy, we see some of the bulge poking up and down out of the disc plane, which is apparent in the structure of the Milky Way in the region of Sagittarius.
Broadly, it wouldn't really matter where we were located in the disc of our galaxy. The Milky Way would look substantially similar.