by MarkBour » Thu Nov 26, 2020 12:15 am
Ann wrote: ↑Wed Nov 25, 2020 9:17 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Wed Nov 25, 2020 9:07 pm
Well, the light from Andromeda isn't really old light. In fact, no light that you see is old. The photons that strike your retina are never more than a few picoseconds old.
Photons always travel at
c. But light travels slower than
c in a
medium. That's because a photon in a medium will get
scattered, meaning it will be absorbed and re-emitted, a process that takes time. So the net speed of light is reduced, even though every photon still travels at c. A photon coming from Andromeda may or may not make it to Earth without scattering. But once it gets to our atmosphere, it will scatter many times before it reaches your eye, and then scatter many more times as it moves through your eye. Each scattering event consumes the original photon and produces a new one. So everything you see is the product of a photon produced by a scattering event in your vitreous a few micrometers from your retina. You detect a brand new photon.
Chris? Any thoughts on how much the Milky Way would be inclined if viewed from the Andromeda Galaxy?
Ann
That was a very interesting point about the movement of light through media, Chris.
Ann --
In spite of my love for geometry and trigonometry, those relatively simple branches of mathematics that should be able to give a precise answer, I find my lack of astronomical knowledge to be
my limitation. The question you're asking, of course, is the same question as drawing a line from the center of our galaxy to the center of the Andromeda galaxy, and determining how much such a line is inclined from the plane of our galaxy. If that line was perpendicular to our galactic plane, then the Milky Way would appear face on from Andromeda. If the line is right along our galactic plane, then the Milky Way is edge on, when viewed from Andromeda.
I can give an imprecise answer, from looking at the Milky Way and Andromeda in the sky. The Andromeda galaxy is pretty near the band of the Milky Way. So, it is 2.5 million light years away, in a direction that is not very different than the direction we look to see our galactic plane. If Andromeda had been over by Arcturus, or Merak, or Formalhaut, or some such place, it would be different, but our view of it is much closer to a line we would draw from Earth across a part of our home galaxy. My rough conclusion is that from Andromeda, the Milky Way galaxy is seen mostly edge on.
I have read that Earth is some 50-100 light years off of the center of the galactic plane of the Milky Way at the present time. That would skew our view a bit, but compared to the radius of our galaxy, it is tiny, so I don't think it has a large effect.
At the right is a diagram I found at:
https://www.handprint.com/ASTRO/IMG/satellites.gif
In that diagram, they indicate Andromeda (M31) at the far left. (Of course it would actually be a great distance away, but in that direction.)
Also, here's a glorious simulation of the eventual collision of Andromeda and the Milky Way that has been predicted. I note that in the simulation, they initially draw the Milky Way as edge on.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... lision.ogv
[quote=Ann post_id=308397 time=1606339060 user_id=129702]
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=308395 time=1606338436 user_id=117706]
Well, the light from Andromeda isn't really old light. In fact, no light that you see is old. The photons that strike your retina are never more than a few picoseconds old.
Photons always travel at [i]c[/i]. But light travels slower than [i]c [/i]in a [i]medium[/i]. That's because a photon in a medium will get [i]scattered[/i], meaning it will be absorbed and re-emitted, a process that takes time. So the net speed of light is reduced, even though every photon still travels at c. A photon coming from Andromeda may or may not make it to Earth without scattering. But once it gets to our atmosphere, it will scatter many times before it reaches your eye, and then scatter many more times as it moves through your eye. Each scattering event consumes the original photon and produces a new one. So everything you see is the product of a photon produced by a scattering event in your vitreous a few micrometers from your retina. You detect a brand new photon.
[/quote]
Chris? Any thoughts on how much the Milky Way would be inclined if viewed from the Andromeda Galaxy?
Ann
[/quote]
That was a very interesting point about the movement of light through media, Chris.
Ann --
In spite of my love for geometry and trigonometry, those relatively simple branches of mathematics that should be able to give a precise answer, I find my lack of astronomical knowledge to be [i]my[/i] limitation. The question you're asking, of course, is the same question as drawing a line from the center of our galaxy to the center of the Andromeda galaxy, and determining how much such a line is inclined from the plane of our galaxy. If that line was perpendicular to our galactic plane, then the Milky Way would appear face on from Andromeda. If the line is right along our galactic plane, then the Milky Way is edge on, when viewed from Andromeda.
I can give an imprecise answer, from looking at the Milky Way and Andromeda in the sky. The Andromeda galaxy is pretty near the band of the Milky Way. So, it is 2.5 million light years away, in a direction that is not very different than the direction we look to see our galactic plane. If Andromeda had been over by Arcturus, or Merak, or Formalhaut, or some such place, it would be different, but our view of it is much closer to a line we would draw from Earth across a part of our home galaxy. My rough conclusion is that from Andromeda, the Milky Way galaxy is seen mostly edge on.
[float=right][attachment=0]satellites.gif[/attachment][/float]
I have read that Earth is some 50-100 light years off of the center of the galactic plane of the Milky Way at the present time. That would skew our view a bit, but compared to the radius of our galaxy, it is tiny, so I don't think it has a large effect.
At the right is a diagram I found at: https://www.handprint.com/ASTRO/IMG/satellites.gif
In that diagram, they indicate Andromeda (M31) at the far left. (Of course it would actually be a great distance away, but in that direction.)
Also, here's a glorious simulation of the eventual collision of Andromeda and the Milky Way that has been predicted. I note that in the simulation, they initially draw the Milky Way as edge on.
[url]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/da/Andromeda_and_Milky_Way_collision.ogv[/url]