Simulation: A Disk Galaxy Forms
			
		
		
		
			How do galaxies like our Milky Way form?
Since our universe moves too slowly to watch, faster-moving computer simulations are created to help find out. 
Green depicts (mostly) hydrogen gas in the 
above movie, while time is shown in billions of years since the Big Bang on the lower right.
Pervasive 
dark matter 
is present but not shown.
As the simulation begins, ambient gas falls into and accumulates in regions of relatively high gravity. 
Soon numerous proto-galaxies form, spin, and begin to 
merge. 
After about four billion years, a well-defined center materializes that dominates a region about 100,000 
light-years 
across and starts looking like a modern disk 
galaxy.
After a few billion more years, however, this early galaxy collides with another, all while 
streams of gas from other mergers rain down on this 
strange and fascinating cosmic dance.
As the 
simulation reaches half the current age of the universe, a single larger disk develops.
Even so, gas blobs -- some representing 
small satellite galaxies -- fall into and become absorbed by the rotating galaxy as the present epoch is reached and the movie ends. 
For our 
Milky Way Galaxy, 
however, big mergers may not be over -- recent evidence indicates that our large spiral disk Galaxy 
will collide and coalesce with the slightly larger 
Andromeda spiral disk galaxy in the next few billion years.