Milky Way Galaxy
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia | Date: 2007
Large spiral galaxy (roughly 150,000 light-years in diameter) that contains Earth's solar system. It includes the multitude of stars whose light is seen as the Milky Way, the irregular luminous band that encircles the sky defining the plane of the galactic disk. The Milky Way system contains hundreds of billions of stars and large amounts of interstellar gas and dust. Because the dust obscures astronomers' view of many of its stars, large areas could not be studied before the development of infrared astronomy and radio astronomy ( radio and radar astronomy). Its precise constituents, shape, and true size and mass are still not known; it is believed to contain large amounts of dark matter and a massive black hole at its core. The Sun lies in one of the Galaxy's spiral arms, about 27,000 light-years from the centre.
Copyright 1994-2007 Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Star streams reveal galaxy's dining habits.(indications that the MIlky Way added to its growth by absorbing other galaxies)(Brief Article)
Science News; 11/13/1999; Cowen, R.; 631 words
; ... Michigan State University in East Lansing and his colleagues have confirmed the streams found by Helmi's team, he told SCIENCE NEWS. His team has also identified a trail of stars that may be associated with the streams and that might have arisen when the captured ...
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The galactic gourmand. (a dwarf galaxy passing through the Milky Way)
The Economist (US); 3/7/1998; 787 words
; Dwarfs' entrails and fluffy star-tails-is that what the Milky Way is made of? NEXT time the night sky is clear, look, if the season and latitude are propitious, for the constellation of Sagittarius. That is where the Milky Way is at its brightest. Partly, this is because the galaxy's centre is in
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Milky Way Has Fascinated Civilizations for Centuries
Albuquerque Journal; 6/2/2005; Milky Way Chronicles Rae Ann Kumelos, Philip Mahon For the Journal; 787 words
; "A broad and ample road, whose dust is gold, And pavement stars, as stars to thee appear Seen in the galaxy, that milky way" John Milton, "Paradise Lost" It can be seen on any clear summer night away from city lights: a river of light rising in the east with Cygnus the Swan -- our home island of
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Milky Way is being invaded
USA Today; 6/1/1998; Anonymous; 387 words
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A foreign streak; Stellar origins; What the Milky Way had for breakfast.(Science and Technology)(Brief Article)
The Economist (US); 1/13/2001; 734 words
; IF STARS carried passports, millions of those in the earth's native galaxy, the Milky Way, would have reason to fear deportation as illegal aliens. Even after residing there for 10 billion years it seems they still do not blend sufficiently well with their surroundings to pass for genuine locals,
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