Quote:
Originally Posted by -George-
I never understood how can we have a photo of the Milky way?
You would have to be outside of the galaxy to take a photo... do we actually have something that has flown a trilion light years away to be able to take the photo?
How does the transimission/feed even get back to earth from a distance beyond our galaxy?
None of that makes sense to me
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You can't get a photo of the whole Milky Way, but you can get a photo of the part near us, which is what we see. We are well towards the outer rim of the galaxy and, as I understand it, the central core is hidden from us by clouds of dust and gas. My guess is that what we see at night and in photos is part of our local spiral arm. (Anybody who actually knows about this is free to correct me...)