Our solar system is just a tiny speck in the Milky Way.
© NASA/JPL-Caltech the Milky Way |
By Kate Baggaley, Popular Science
When you gaze up into the night sky, there are thousands of stars you can see without any help from a telescope. That might sound like a lot. But those stars are actually just the ones that are brightest and closest to Earth. The Milky Way—the galaxy Earth calls home—is bigger. A whole lot bigger. But just how many stars are there in the galaxy?
Unfortunately, we can’t simply look at all the stars
with telescopes and count them up. That’s because our galaxy isn’t only
full of stars. There are also clouds of dust and gas that block our
view of dim or faraway stars. So astronomers have to answer this
question by working backwards.
The
first step is to figure out how much stuff, or mass, there is in the
entire galaxy. Astronomers at the University of Arizona recently
estimated that the Milky Way weighs about 960 billion times as much as our own sun. It’s made up of things like stars, dust, gas… and dark matter. Dark matter is mysterious
and scientists aren’t really sure what it is. However, they can see how
gravity from dark matter affects stars as they orbit the center of the
galaxy. “Basically the faster your stars are moving, the more dark
matter there is,” explains Malanka Riabokin, an instructional specialist
in the astronomy department at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
Dark matter is believed to make up around 90 percent of the material in
the galaxy. Once you subtract the dark matter and dust and gas, you’re
left with all the star stuff—the equivalent of about 30 to 50 billion
suns.
But the actual number of stars is much higher than that. That’s because stars can be anywhere from 8 percent the mass of our own sun to 20 times as large. When astronomers look at the places where stars are born, they see tiny stars are much more common than massive ones.
So we know how much star stuff is floating around the galaxy. And we
know roughly how much of that mass should be big stars, and how much
should belong to small stars. That means we should know how many stars
there are in total, right?
Well, kind of. There’s a lot of
guesswork that goes into each step of counting the stars in the galaxy.
This means that there isn’t just one estimate for how many stars are
scattered across the Milky Way. Depending on whom you ask, there may be
anywhere between 200 billion and 1 trillion stars out there.
Any way you slice it, though, that’s a lot of stars.
“When
you look up at the night sky and realize that there are literally
billions upon billions of stars that you cannot see, and just how deep
that space must be to accommodate all those stars (and other galaxies,
so much farther away!) it starts to give you an appreciation of the
scale of the Universe,” Riabokin says.
COMMENTS