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‘Coin flip': 50-50 chance Milky Way will be destroyed in collision with Andromeda galaxy

‘Coin flip': 50-50 chance Milky Way will be destroyed in collision with Andromeda galaxy

News.com.au2 days ago

The Milky Way may not have a catastrophic collision with another huge galaxy as has been predicted, computer simulations revealed Monday, giving our home galaxy a coin-flip chance of avoiding destruction.
But don't worry either way: no galactic smash-up is expected for billions of years, long after our ageing Sun will have burnt away all life on Earth.
The Milky Way and the even-larger galaxy Andromeda are speeding towards each other at 100 kilometres (60 miles) a second, and scientists have long predicted they will collide in around 4.5 billion years.
That would be bad news for our neighbourhood.
Previous research has suggested that the Sun — and our Earth — could wind up in the centre of this newly merged 'Milkomeda' galaxy and get sucked into its supermassive black hole. Alternatively, the Sun could be shot out into the emptiness of intergalactic space.
However 'proclamations of the impending demise of our galaxy seem greatly exaggerated', according to a new study in the journal Nature Astronomy.
There is only a roughly 50 per cent chance the Milky Way and Andromeda will smash into each other in the next 10 billion years, the international team of astrophysicists determined.
'It's basically a coin flip,' lead study author Till Sawala of the University of Helsinki told AFP.
The researchers ran more than 100,000 computer simulations of our universe's future, using new observations from space telescopes.
A galaxy merger in the next five billion years is 'extremely unlikely', Sawala said.
Much more likely is that the galaxies will zoom relatively close to each other — say, a little under 500,000 light years away.
In only half of the simulations did dark matter then eventually drag the two galaxies together into a cataclysmic embrace.
But this would likely only occur in around eight billion years — long after our Sun has died, the researchers found.
'So it could be that our galaxy will end up destroyed,' Sawala said. 'But it's also possible that our galaxy and Andromeda will orbit one another for tens of billions of years — we just don't know.'
'The fate of our galaxy is still completely open,' the study summarised.
The researchers emphasised that their findings did not mean that previous calculations were incorrect, just that they had used newer observations and taken into account the effect of more satellite galaxies.
Future data releases from Europe's recently retired Gaia space telescope as well as Hubble could provide a definitive answer to this question within the next decade, Sawala predicted.
How much all this all matters to us is a matter of debate. The Sun is expected to make Earth inhospitable to life in around a billion years.
'We might have some emotional attachment' to what happens after we're gone, Sawala said.
'I might prefer the Milky Way not to collide with Andromeda, even though it has absolutely no relevance to my own life — or the lives of my children or great-great grandchildren.'

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Zelensky says Russian ceasefire memorandum is an 'ultimatum'
Zelensky says Russian ceasefire memorandum is an 'ultimatum'

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Zelensky says Russian ceasefire memorandum is an 'ultimatum'

President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday said that Russia was giving Ukraine an ultimatum at peace negotiations but said he was ready to hold direct talks with Russia's Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump "any day". His comments came after Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul swapped terms for agreeing to a ceasefire and said they were ready to host another round of prisoner exchanges. Zelensky told reporters -- including from AFP -- that the Russian document outlining Moscow's requirements to halt its invasion amounted to an ultimatum. "That is, it is not a memorandum of understanding. At least a memorandum of understanding should be signed by two parties, not just one party demanding something," he said sitting around a table with international and Ukrainian media. "Therefore, it cannot be called a memorandum. It is, after all, an ultimatum from the Russian side to us," he added. Zelensky said that there was no point in continuing peace talks in Istanbul with the current level of Russian delegates as they are not high-ranking enough, calling instead for a sit-down with Putin. "We are ready for exchanges, but to continue diplomatic meetings in Istanbul at a level that does not solve anything further, I think, is pointless," Zelensky said, referring to the two agreements for prisoner of war swaps that have come out of the talks. He said instead that he was ready to hold a meeting with Putin and Trump. "We are ready for such a meeting any day," Zelensky said, adding that he was proposing that a ceasefire be put in place before any such summit, which would also include Turkish President Recep Tayip Erdogan. The White House said that Trump was "open" to meeting his Russian and Ukrainian counterparts in Turkey after the two sides failed on Monday to make headway towards an elusive ceasefire. Zelensky added that Ukraine and Russia were prepared to exchange captured military personnel this weekend, following the agreement between Moscow and Kyiv brokered in Turkey this week. "The Russian side has passed on information that this weekend -- on Saturday and Sunday -- they will be able to transfer 500 people, 500 of our military," Zelensky said. "We will be ready to exchange the relevant number" of prisoners of war, he added. Tens of thousands have been killed since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, with swathes of eastern and southern Ukraine destroyed and millions forced to flee their homes in Europe's largest refugee crisis since World War II. jbr/jc/bc

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