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posted by janrinok on Wednesday December 07 2016, @04:54AM   Printer-friendly
from the it's-a-galaxy-Jim,-but-not-as-we-know-it dept.

Not all galaxies sparkle with stars. Galaxies as wide as the Milky Way but bereft of starlight are scattered throughout our cosmic neighborhood. Unlike Andromeda and other well-known galaxies, these dark beasts have no grand spirals of stars and gas wrapped around a glowing core, nor are they radiant balls of densely packed stars. Instead, researchers find just a wisp of starlight from a tenuous blob.

"If you took the Milky Way but threw away about 99 percent of the stars, that's what you'd get," says Roberto Abraham, an astrophysicist at the University of Toronto.

How these dark galaxies form is unclear. They could be a whole new type of galaxy that challenges ideas about the birth of galaxies. Or they might be outliers of already familiar galaxies, black sheep shaped by their environment. Wherever they come from, dark galaxies appear to be ubiquitous. Once astronomers reported the first batch in early 2015 — which told them what to look for — they started picking out dark denizens in many nearby clusters of galaxies. "We've gone from none to suddenly over a thousand," Abraham says. "It's been remarkable."


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 07 2016, @03:58PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 07 2016, @03:58PM (#438386)

    Definitely not. All of Babylon 5 takes place in single galaxy (with the exception of Third space, where the aliens come from some other dimension). The Shadows inhabited a world on the edge of the Galaxy, also know as The Rim. Of course JMS did make some classic mistakes where the Galaxy became synonymous with all of the Universe when Lorien remarked that he was the first being to achieve sentience in all of the Universe. I find that laughable at best. Maybe he was the first in our galaxy, but there is no way he could have traveled all of the universe with its endless amounts of galaxies. It has really irked me.