Note to self: Never give Art an opening. Always use the speel chacker.neufer wrote:sublet: Property leased by one lessee to another.rstevenson wrote: Unlike galaxies, globular clusters have sublety.rstevenson wrote:
Rob
Note to self: Never give Art an opening. Always use the speel chacker.neufer wrote:sublet: Property leased by one lessee to another.rstevenson wrote: Unlike galaxies, globular clusters have sublety.rstevenson wrote:
Oh, Rob, you know Art: he'll make his own opening if no one gives him one! Think of providing an opening as channeling the energy in the direction you want it to go, rather than... well, you know...rstevenson wrote:Note to self: Never give Art an opening. Always use the speel chacker.
Rob
But you're a donutrstevenson wrote:
Note to self: Never give Art an opening.
In globular clusters, if Gravity is the only dominant force, what is it doing differently from "normal galaxies"? Gravity is a known force at present. To say it is the only force is short sighted. There may be other forces involved that we have not discovered yet.Chris Peterson wrote:Spherical symmetry doesn't argue against gravitational forces being the primary factor in the formation of a many-star body, whether a galaxy (and there are spherical galaxies) or a cluster.neufer wrote:Then how do you explain the spherical symmetry of globular clusters
I'm not trying to describe any detail about how galaxies or clusters form (it's an area of active research, of course), only arguing that in the broadest of terms, gravity is probably the dominant force involved.
I don't doubt that other forces play a role. For instance, we have good reason to believe that hydrodynamic drag and electromagnetic momentum transfer effects are important in creating accretion discs in planetary systems, and possibly in galaxies. Without those effects, there is no mechanism to produce a disc, and you get a spherical halo, as we see in the dark matter surrounding galaxies. Nevertheless, gravity is dominant force in bringing these structures together.garry wrote:In globular clusters, if Gravity is the only dominant force, what is it doing differently from "normal galaxies"? Gravity is a known force at present. To say it is the only force is short sighted. There may be other forces involved that we have not discovered yet.
I don't think anything "swept across the universe" to create globular clusters. It seems likely they are simply a byproduct of galaxy formation, and it is therefore not incredible at all that they are found around large galaxies. It would be much more remarkable if they existed in some galaxies but not others.Ann wrote:What I find incredible about globular clusters is that they are found in all big galaxies (and in some small galaxies, too), and most of the globulars are between ten and twelve billion years old. What incredible forces swept across the universe between ten and twelve billion years ago to create these amazing super star clusters everywhere in the cosmos?