Beyond
the stars
When you look up to the night sky and see "the stars", many
of these points of light turn out to be two or more stars, small clusters
of stars, galaxies and even clusters of galaxies. The brightness of
a star as seen from Earth does not indicate its closeness. It may be
close or far away, as a galaxy far away can seem as bright as a small
nearby star.
Not are stars that appear in the same section of the sky are necessarily
close to each other. Since man first looked towards the night sky, patterns
of stars have been imagined and named. The signs of the zodiac and the
Southern Cross are two examples. These patterns are called 'constellations'
and although they can help us with navigation and star finding, they
are not real groupings of stars in an astronomical sense.
Binary star and other small star
systems
Single stars like our Sun might even be a minority,
as many "stars" turn out to be "binary stars" or
two stars rotating around each other. Alpha Centauri is a binary star
system and a single star all rotating around each other. These sets
of stars could have their own Solar System centred on a pair of stars
instead of only one. Can you imagine dawn with two suns rising?
Star clusters
The Pleiades, or seven sisters, to the North West of Orion and near
the Milky Way are a
nearby cluster of not seven, but about 120 stars. These stars appear
in the same part of the sky, but they are all near each other in a small
group. Thus, they may have a name like a constellation, but they are
a true group of stars.
Galaxies
Galaxies are much larger groups of stars, which seem to have their
own internal organisation. Many galaxies like our own, the Milky Way
being but part of one arm of stars, appear in telescopes as large wheels
with spiralling spokes of stars. These are known as 'spiral galaxies'.
Other galaxies are less well organised, but all have some structure
in the way their member stars are arranged in space. It is now believed
that at the centre of our own galaxy and probably at the centre of all
galaxies lies a giant "Black Hole". This "Black Hole"
sucks in nearby stars and provides the gravitational energy required
to rotate the galaxy and keep its stars ordered.
Our two nearest galaxies are the small, and large, megallenic clouds,
seen to the west of the Milky Way. These galaxies are about 170 000
light years away.
Galaxy clusters and other deep space
objects
The further we look into space, the more we can see of the bigger picture.
Large surveys of galaxies have revealed that galaxies themselves form
super clusters and strings of galaxies through space.
So far, the furthest and thus, the oldest objects we have detected are
about 12 billion light years away and were created at the beginning
of time. They probably do not exist as we see them now, because the
light that we see left them 12 billion years ago! Compare this with
the age of our own solar sytems which is only 4.5 billion years old.
|