What was it like when the Milky Way grew up?

<p>The Milky Way galaxy may be just one among trillions present within the observable Universe, but it&rsquo;s uniquely special for personal reasons to us: it&rsquo;s our cosmic home. It&rsquo;s the fertile soil from which our Sun and Solar System, including the bodies that would eventually become planet Earth, sprung some 4.6 billion years ago. All told, it&rsquo;s composed of a few hundred billion stars, about a trillion solar masses worth of dark matter, a supermassive central black hole of about 4 million solar masses, and a plethora of gas and dust. And that&rsquo;s no outlier; we&rsquo;re actually somewhat typical of modern galaxies, with perhaps a hundred billion others similar to our own. We&rsquo;re neither among the biggest nor the smallest of galaxies, nor are we in an ultra-massive cluster or found in isolation, but rather a modest galaxy group, where we&rsquo;re the second-largest member.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/starts-with-a-bang/what-was-it-like-when-the-milky-way-grew-up-e34a3e897cc7"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>
Tags: Milky Ways