We have plenty of things to worry about between now and then for this to even bother me. Regardless, I anticipate my ascension to a higher plane.
We have plenty of things to worry about between now and then for this to even bother me. Regardless, I anticipate my ascension to a higher plane.
What do you mean by happen tomorrow? If the collision started tomorrow? Cause it'll be colliding for thousands of years before the collision got to us.
everything is wrapped in gray
i'm focusing on your image
can you hear me in the void?
If it happened tomorrow I would force Rod to buy a webcam and he'd whisper sweet nothings to me until the catacalysm.
I'm sure that impact would take years to get to us, because we're several light years away from the edge of the galaxy.
everything is wrapped in gray
i'm focusing on your image
can you hear me in the void?
Not to mention that, like Vyk said, the gravitational impact on Earth would probably be negligent due to all the dead space between every star. A star would have to come fairly close and be pretty massive to do any damage.
But like others said, the Sun will encompass Earth by the time it happens, so WHO CARES!?
There's no such thing as "instant" when talking about things this vast. Even moving at light speed takes hundreds of thousands to millions of years. If I recall correctly it takes like 2.5 million years or something for the solar system to navigate the perimeter of the Milky Way. Its going to take millions of years for Andromeda to even touch us. And its going to take tens of millions of years for the whole event to pan out. Probably even closer to a billion years for it all to settle back to one giant galaxy
Through what? The invisible ropes connecting everything? The only thing that connects the Milky Way is gravity. Therefore, a large body from the galaxy first has to get close enough for its gravitational field to impact the Earth's orbit around the sun. That would be the "initial" change. If the edge of one galaxy starts going through the edge of the other side of the Milky Way, the Earth won't "feel" a thing.
There's also no such thing as "instant."
And dark matter interacts with the matter we see by...? Oh yes, gravity.![]()
Also remember that gravity itself moves at the speed of light.![]()