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- From: amon@elegabalus.cs.qub.ac.uk
- Subject: Re: Answers to PLANES of the ecliptic question
- Message-ID: <1992Jul30.120123.92561@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: Thu, 30 Jul 92 12:00:00 GMT
- Organization: [via International Space University]
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-
- > What would we measure this precession against, in order to
- distinguish it
- > from the revolution about the galactic center, and oscillation
- about the
-
- > galactic plane?
- >
-
-
- My gut feel is that no two circuits will be the same. Since a
- revolution is on the order of 100MY or so, there will be changes in
- stellar populations, changes in distribution due to mass falling into
- the center, different galactic "MASSCONS" at different points in the
- orbit that change over time. Even if the interior rotates "sort of
- solid body" the sort of is not really solid body. There is
- differential rotation as you go inwards. Just not as much as there
- "should" be.
-
- I suspect Sol's orbit is rather chaotic.
-
- And then, with the last orbit or so Milky Way has had a near approach
- of a small galaxy and the opposite rim from us is bent upwards. There
- is a trail of gas behind one of the Magellanic clouds (there is
- apparently a third one behind one of the ones we can see). Thus we
- are in a "peculiar" galaxy and our orbit may well have been perturbed
- to some extent by that pass.
-
-
- Additionally, current thinking is that galactic near misses are quite
- common. On a scale of 100MY per orbit, we might have seen a
- significant perturbation every few orbits. Keep in mind that the 2.2M
- LY between hear and Andromeda could be closed and reopened in the
- time span of just a couple orbits.
-
-