A giant cloud of hydrogen gas, discovered in 1963, is moving at more than 150 miles per second per second and is about to collide with the Milky Way, leading to a huge process of star formation. But this doesn’t have anything to do with that dreaded Mayan prophecy: The cloud will collide with the Milky Way in less than 40 million years, condensing into tens of thousands of bright, massive stars that will explode as supernovas within a couple of million years.
The Daily Galaxy quotes radio astronomer W. Butler Burton as saying, "We might be witnessing the final stages of the formation process of our galaxy."
They quote radio astronomer Felix J. Lockman as saying, "(The cloud’s) shape, somewhat similar to that of a comet, indicates that it’s already hitting gas in our galaxy’s outskirts. It is also feeling a tidal force from the gravity of the Milky Way and may be in the process of being torn apart. Our galaxy will get a rain of gas from this cloud, then in about 20 to 40 million years, the cloud’s core will smash into the Milky Way’s plane."
Many clouds of hydrogen surround the Milky Way. But astronomers didn’t start spotting them until a half-century ago–after the advent of radio telescopes, which are able to detect cold, neutral hydrogen gas. The early observations were not accurate enough to determine the clouds’ distances, masses, or directions of motion.
The hydrogen cloud, named Smith’s Cloud after Dutch astronomy student Gail Smith, who discovered it in 1963. Curious about the cloud’s elongated shape, a team of astronomers led Lockman o, took tens of thousands of radio brightness measurements. The data reveal that the cloud is just 8000 light-years away from the Milky Way’s central plane, making it the closest one known. Its comet-like shape is apparently due to the tidal effects of the Milky Way.
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