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								|   | An extragalactic journeyView: galaxies.txt
 I / A Journey to the Center of the Milky Way
 . . . Thoughts,
 Which ten times faster glide than the sun's beams. . . .
 -- Shakespeare
 
 Our Sun and its planets lie in the environs of the Milky Way Galaxy.
 To go to the center of the galaxy would require navigating a
 distance of some thirty-thousand light-years.  Such a journey lies far
 beyond the technological capacity of our species in this century;
 interstellar distances are vast, the energy required to traverse them
 enormous.  Some say we shall never be able to do it.  Others say we
 might.  No one expects that we shall do it soon.
 Yet we can make the trip today, aboard the ship of the
 imagination.  This may seem like mere daydreaming, but dreams have
 preceded our earlier journeys, as when our forebearers contemplated
 oceanic horizons in the days before we mastered the seas.  And the
 sights to be seen during such a journey need not be _pure_
 imagination; we have learned enough about the galaxies to predict in
 general terms what we might hope to see if we traveled through them.
 If we need further encouragement, let us consider the remarkable
 accommodation of science to fantasy represented by the time-dilation
 effect in Einstein's special theory of relativity.  The theory,
 verified in many an experiment, tells us that the passage of time
 slows down dramatically aboard a spaceship that is accelerated to
 velocities approaching that of light.  (The speed of light itself can
 never be attained, it adds.)  We can spend energy to buy time.
 Owing to this effect a starship able to maintain an acceleration
 equal to the force of gravity here on Earth could reach the center of
 our galaxy, thirty-thousand light-years distant, in under twenty-five
 years of on-board time.  Neighboring galaxies could be achieved in
 less than thirty years, and gulfs separating clusters of galaxies
 crossed in perhaps a decade longer.  So let us imagine ourselves
 aboard such a ship, and see where it might take us.
 The ship's appointments may be left to the preference of each
 passenger.  We might envision a giant vessel complete with baseball
 teams, string quartets, a hardwood copse and trout pound, and a crew
 of thousands selected from backgrounds sufficiently varied to ensure
 that things will never quite run smoothly.  Or a more modest cruise
 starship, with a tiny nightclub, an indefatigable recreation director,
 many outside cabins with portholes.  Or a military starships, all
 drums, boots, and salutes.  Each to his own.  There is ample room in
 the imagination for imaginary starships, as there is in the cosmos for
 real ones.
 The day of our departure is sad, its farewells permanent.  We
 travelers will be able to take advantage of the time-dilation effect.
 Friends and families who stay at home will not.  They will have been
 dead for tens of thousands of years by the time we reach the center of
 our galaxy.  Together we sing the anthem of interstellar explorers
 everywhere, a song of final farewell.  Then we depart.
 The early years of the voyage pass uneventfully while our ship
 accumulates velocity.  Years pass before we can celebrate having
 attained the distance of the nearest extrasolar neighbor, Alpha
 Centauri, a little over four light-years out.  The Sun is now but a
 dot of light in the constellation Taurus.  Soon it will become
 difficult to identify the dim little Sun in the sky.
 In the years that follow, the stars crawl across the sky, slowly
 distorting the constellations we have known on Earth until most are
 unrecognizable.  Our course takes us along the plane of our galaxy
 directly toward its center.  Our view is composed of stars and of the
 clouds of dust and gas that lie in the spaces between the stars.  The
 interstellar clouds are mostly dark, but when we encounter one of the
 spiral arms of our galaxy, we find them lined with bright nebulae --
 regions where newly-formed stars have lit up the surrounding clouds --
 and the sight of these glowing shoals cheers us as we speed on.
 Many a flower of these starry pastures could hold our attention --
 the high-density dwarf stars, neutron stars and black holes, the
 endlessly-varied matchups of multiple stars, the variable and flare
 stars, and the billions of ordinary stars like our Sun, not to mention
 their planets.  But we must hurry on.
 After decades of travel, the interstellar clouds at last fall
 away.  Ahead lies the central region of the galaxy, an elliptical
 cosmos of stars glowing through the relatively-unsullied spaces with
 fantastic clarity.  The color of this great egg is that of a bloodied
 yolk, the red and orange light of old stars that have been burning
 steadily for billions of years.  Behind us the inner portions of the
 dusty disk hang like the walls of a canyon; thousands of light-years
 down one wall we can discern the elbow joint where one spiral arm
 emerges from the central regions and begins a winding path that will
 eventually take it out past our sun.
 We plunge into the central regions.  Country dwellers on our first
 visit downtown, we are surprised at the congestion of the stars, their
 hustling pace.  Their light is as warm in hue as torch-light.  They
 pursue jitterbug orbits that seem hurried by the standards of the
 solar region, and the clearances among them are narrow.  Yet all
 conduct their affairs without colliding.
 Our destination is the nucleus of the galaxy.  We can see its
 brilliant lamp ahead.  What will we find there?  An enormous star
 cluster, sitting like a clutch of diamonds at the center of the
 galactic diadem?  The ominous warren of a black hole, a creature out
 of the Inferno rather than the Paradiso?
 It is just at this point of the voyage of our imagination that we
 must turn away.  We know that our galaxy has a nucleus, but do not yet
 know enough about it to be able to describe it.  The captain orders
 our course altered, and our ship describes a sweeping arc that takes
 it up and out of the plane of the galaxy.  Ahead lies intergalactic
 space.
 
 II / A Journey Out of Our Galaxy
 
 We speed out of the Milky Way in our imaginary spaceship like divers
 ascending from the depth of the sea.  The myriad bright stars which
 had been our companions now diminish and number, then fall away behind
 us.  In their stead we are left with the scattered stars of the
 galactic halo.  Most are dim dwarves, remnants of stars that formed
 more than ten billion years ago, when the infant galaxy was more
 nearly spherical and had not yet collapsed to its present, flattened
 shape.  A few "runaways," younger stars ejected out of the plane of
 the galaxy by quirk gravitational encounters, flit among these elders
 like bright tropical fish venturing from their accustomed shallows.
 To exit a galaxy is no handy matter, but eventually we attain a
 sufficient remove to be able to view the galaxy spread out below us.
 The central bulge of galaxy looms directly under us, its shape and
 color like that of a hill of sand.  The galactic disk surrounds it, a
 monumental tangle stretching to the celestial horizons.  The glowing
 clouds of the spiral arms wend their way out through the disk, often
 obscured by intervening dark clouds, like a river cutting through a
 jungle.  Here and there dark tattered towers are reared up out of the
 welter of the disk, masses of interstellar gas and dust that have been
 heaved out of the galactic plane in the course of the collisions of
 clouds and the explosions of stars.
 We climb further and our view of the galactic disk improves.  The
 time comes when we can discern the Sun, a little yellow star nestled
 in the embrace of the out reaches of one of the spiral arms, a dot of
 light barely visible through the ship's telescope.  Here long ago was
 our home.
 The globular star clusters make for spectacles close at hand.
 From time to time one of these chandeliers of stars passes abeam of
 our ship.  We are tempted to stop and explore its hundreds of
 thousands of stars, but we are bound for territories more remote.
 When the outermost of the globular clusters along our course has
 fallen away aft, we celebrate having left our home galaxy behind.  The
 choice of demarcation is rather arbitrary, for we still lie well
 within the gravitational domain of our galaxy.  But we feel the need
 of a cheering toast, for we are embarking upon the awful gulf of some
 of the emptiest space known in a universe that is mostly space.  Out
 galaxy hangs behind us like a gong, its slowly diminished starlight
 painting shadows across our ship from aft, while ahead yawns the void,
 its only light the pearlescent background haze of a universe of
 galaxies.
 Our eyes seek out landmarks lest we be seized by vertigo.  Well of
 to port hangs the most evident galaxy in sight after the Milky Way,
 the Large Magellanic Cloud.  Beyond it we can make out the less-
 orderly patches of starlight that comprise the Small Magellanic Cloud
 and the Sculptor and Fornax dwarf galaxies.  To starboard lie two
 other dwarves, the little Leo I and Leo II galaxies.  We steer for
 them.
 Seven hundred fifty hundred-thousand light-years separate the
 Milky Way from the Leo pair.  Our activities during this phase of the
 voyage are those suitable to a long haul.  We carve crimshaw, repair
 our gear, read all the back issues of the _National Geographic._  Down
 below the stokers shovel whole planets' worth of fuel into the engines
 to maintain our acceleration.  Leo I and II slowly grow in the forward
 viewports.
 Now we can look back upon most of the Local Group in a single
 gaze.
 The Milky Way Galaxy, though still imposing, has shrunk until it
 covers less than ten-degrees of sky; we can eclipse it with an
 outstretched hand.  A little train of satellite galaxies stretches off
 to one side of the Milky Way.  In the same part of the sky but far
 deeper in space hangs the spiral galaxy M33, and near it the majestic
 M31, dominant galaxy of the Local Group.  Beyond them we can glimpse
 the elliptical galaxy Maffei I and its spiral companion Maffei II.
 Will we in our little ship feel a last pang of leave-taking as we
 say good-bye to this corner of the universe, with its trillions of
 suns, in the light of one of which we came into being?  Or has this
 already become too strange and remote to retain any of the warmth of
 home?  We rocket past the Leo I dwarf galaxy and head out of the Local
 Group.
 
 III / A Journey Through Intergalactic Space
 
 We accelerate out of the Local Group.  As our speed edges ever closer
 to that of light, time on board passes ever more slowly by comparison
 to that of the universe at large.  Seen through our eyes, the cosmos
 up ahead conducts its affairs with crazy haste.  Planets whirl in
 their orbits.  Stars are formed and die between breakfast and supper.
 We speed on.
 We have entered upon the deep spaces that intervene between groups
 of galaxies.  The familiar spirals of Andromeda and the Milky Way have
 shrunk until smaller than a fingernail at the distance of an
 outstretched hand.  Free from nearby distractions, we are left for
 once in the sole and equitable company of everything -- all the
 galaxies -- floating in space in all directions.  We while away our
 time by examining them through the ship's telescope.
 What we see reminds us of home.
 Back on Earth, we recall, all the things of nature shared a deep
 kinship.  Objects as dissimilar as snowflakes and stones proved to be
 made up of combinations of atoms drawn from a common pool of elements.
 Living things as diverse as a boll weevil and a human being were found
 not only to be made from the same common stock of atoms, but to have
 been built to the design of a single sort of molecule, that of DNA.
 All the creations of our planet could be understood as having been
 formed within the parameters of a few fundamental principles of
 physics.  Yet for all their kinship, no two things could be found
 exactly alike -- no two identical snowflakes or stones, boll weevils
 or people.  Nature's way seemed to be to try everything without ever
 doing the same thing twice.
 Now we find this way at work among the galaxies as well.  All
 function within the purview of basic physical principles.  Each
 galaxy, for example, must move through space along the trajectory
 dictated by its gravitational interaction with its neighbors and with
 the matter of the universe at large; no galaxy can pick up its skirts
 and scamper away in violations of those laws.  And the material
 kinship of galaxies runs deep.  All the stuff of all of them is made,
 so far as we can see, from various mixtures of the same sorts of atoms
 that we came to know back on Earth.
 Indeed, order and regularity are sufficiently manifest in the
 appearance of galaxies that we can sort them into categories.
 About half the galaxies we see are spiral in form, like the Milky
 Way.  Some among our crew take chauvinistic pride in learning that
 their home galaxy is the sort most widespread in the cosmos.  Others
 more dispassionate point out that since most stars are to be found in
 spiral galaxies, the odds are that any given species evolving on a
 given planet circling a star will find itself in a spiral, as did we.
 About one-quarter of the prominent galaxies are ellipticals.  Here
 the stars are arranged not in the flattened disk characteristic of
 spirals, but within a more nearly-spherical volume of space.  At first
 the ellipticals may look rather bland to our spiral-accustomed eyes,
 but as we study them further we come to appreciate their symmetry of
 form, their purity of content (ellipticals contain little interstellar
 gas and are made chiefly of stars and space), and the magnificence of
 their most exemplary representatives, which number among the largest
 galaxies in the universe.
 Scattered among the many other galaxies we find the SO, or
 lenticular, galaxies, much like spirals in form but lacking spiral
 arms.  They combine some of the quantities of both spirals and
 ellipticals.
 A few percent of the major galaxies are irregular.  Their virtues
 are those of individuality, even of eccentricity.  In their splayed
 and contorted forms they offer us endlessly-varied perspectives on the
 star fields and nebulae they contain, like translucent sea-creatures,
 whose interiors and exteriors may at once be seen.
 Dwarf galaxies abound, most of the ellipticals and irregulars.
 Frequently we find them ranged around larger galaxies.  If they seem
 negligible by comparison, we need consider that even a dwarf contains
 millions of stars.
 If no two galaxies are identical, no two stars or planets
 identical, then how can we imagine the variety manifest in the
 universe on a planetary level?  Is there to be found across the whole
 sweep of creation a single insect, flower, raindrop or mud puddle that
 somewhere has a twin?  And where thoughtful life has arisen, to what
 degree do its imaginings converge with that of other intelligences, in
 consequence of nature's predilection for order and form, and to what
 degree do they diverge, in consequence of nature's predilection for
 variety?
 _What is the cosmology of imagination?_ we wonder, as our
 imaginary ship wanders on.
 
 IV / A Journey Between Interacting Galaxies
 
 A high-point in our intergalactic journey comes when we steer our ship
 between a pair of interacting galaxies.  We have chosen to fly through
 the relatively-narrow corridor separating two major spirals.  They
 constitute a binary system, two galaxies bound together
 gravitationally as are the Milky Way Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy.
 For most of their history they have stayed well apart, but now they
 are passing within only a couple of galactic diameters of each other,
 and it as at this dramatic stage in their interaction that we are to
 come between them.
 The first mate is nervous, he points out that if we could see
 where we are headed in terms of Einstein's space-time continuum, we
 would perceive that our course lies along a precariously-narrow ridge
 between two enormous wells created by the gravitational potential of
 the two galaxies.  "We are steering between Scylla and Charybdis," he
 warns, "or rather, Charybdis and Charybdis, for we'll have whirlpools
 to either side."
 The galaxies are passing at an orientation that brings them almost
 face-on to each other, like a pair of cymbals.  From a distance we see
 them edge-on.  As the months pass and we draw closer, our perspective
 makes them appear to swing open like a pair of doors.  The doors do
 not open evenly, but remain somewhat closer together near the top,
 where the relative inclination of the galaxies to each other has
 brought them closest together.  Luminous tendrils bridge the gap
 between them there.  Soon we will be amid the spectacle.
 Thin clouds of hydrogen gas pervade the intergalactic space
 surrounding the two galaxies, and as we plunge through these their
 friction produces a sustained high-pitched wail from the ship's hull.
 To ward off nervousness we take solace in determinism:  It is
 comforting to reflect that the cymbals cannot choose to clash when we
 pass between them, but will continue to follow the orbits dictated by
 Newton's and Einstein's laws.  We have watched the projected course of
 the pair many times in computer simulation -- a do-si-do, the two
 galaxies turning sharply around their common center of gravity and
 then parting, a hundred-million years from now.  We ought to be able
 to sail between them without mishap.  Still, we keep a cautious eye on
 our course; none among us wants us to attempt to be the first to fly
 nearly at the speed of light through a spiral galaxy _edgewise._
 To further comfort ourselves we discuss interacting galaxies in
 general.  We remind ourselves that they are not rare.  All galaxies,
 we reassure one another, may be said to be interacting, in that all
 respond to the general gravitational field of the universe, to which
 millions of galaxies contribute.  Didn't all the galaxies come from an
 undifferentiated soup of matter that permeated the universe long ago?
 And wasn't their formation a story of vortexes arising from the
 primordial soup, condensing to form the pairs, groups and clusters of
 galaxies we see today?  And isn't the structure of galaxies, which we
 find so lovely a sight, but the visible message written by the
 invisible hand of these gravitational interactions?
 There have been many close interactions of galaxies in the past,
 some perhaps involving the Milky Way and the Andromeda spiral, and the
 galaxies survived them in good order.  They were merely twisted,
 distorted, their disks distended, their nuclei banked into fire,
 millions of their stars blasted into space. . . . Whole galaxies
 wrenched out of shape. . . .
 We fall silent.  The ship's hull moans.
 Ultimately we find ourselves between them.  One spiral galaxy
 hangs to port, the other to starboard; two celestial wheels, ourselves
 at the axle.  Their starlight flooding through the ports bathes the
 interior of our ship in a light such as none before us has known.
 We view the spectacle from the overhead observation room, a
 transparent bubble that the ship's designers whimsically modeled after
 the domed railroad passenger cars once popular in North America.  We
 turn out the interior lights and look above us to view the parts of
 the spirals where their mutual inclination has brought the disks
 closest together.
 There the intergalactic gap is bridges by luminous tendrils that
 hang far above us like vines in an arbor.  We can see that they are
 composed of gas and millions of stars being stripped from the lesser
 of the spiral galaxies and transferred to the more massive.
 "A stellar caravan," remarks the first mate.  "'The dogs; the
 caravan moves on.'"
 We gag the first mate with an antimacassar, and resume watching,
 in silence, the transactions of galaxies.
 The stars of a globular cluster flash past at close quarters,
 frightening us all.  Amid screams, someone thinks to ungag the first
 mate.  He bids us not be afraid.  Our course is taking us through the
 outskirts of one of the globular clusters that belongs to the halo of
 one of the galaxies, he shouts.  Stars are flashing by the windows
 like balls from a Roman candle.  He had intended to warn us, he
 shouts.
 Still, we are quick to descend the ladder.  It is days before
 anyone goes back up there.
 Weeks pass and the twin galaxies crawl away aft.  We welcome the
 sight of the dark intergalactic spaces we once had feared.
 
 V / A Journey Through the Local Supercluster
 
 Our old ship has gone far.  We have edges so close to the speed of
 light that sometimes we feel we have become like light, fleet and
 insubstantial, velocity itself our only home.  Decades have passed on
 board.  There have been deaths and births, happiness and sadness,
 success and failure -- in short, decades of life.  The string quartet
 broke up years ago.  The cook has grown grumpy from the ebbing of both
 praise and blame.  Scholars complain about the limitations of the
 ship's vast library.  We who set out on this journey when so young
 have become the elders.  Occasionally we talk of putting in at a
 planet like Earth, near a star like the Sun, in a galaxy like the
 Milky Way, there to make a new start.  But we are going so fast that
 just to decelerate would take the work of many years.  So we fly on,
 like light.
 Where previously we studied the form of galaxies, now our
 attention is drawn to the form of clusters of galaxies.  Here we find
 order, intelligibility, a deep coherence underlying the diversity of
 the universe.
 Clusters of galaxies, we see, display varieties of forms within a
 general pattern.  The most straightforward way to arrange them is
 along a continuum in terms of structure, with the most regular
 clusters of galaxies toward one end and the most seemingly-chaotic
 toward the other.  The regular clusters are spherical or elliptical in
 shape, their galaxies concentrated at the center of the cluster.  The
 irregular clusters, at the other end of our spectrum, are shambling
 and clumpy, often taking the form of extended chains of galaxies, they
 show little or no concentration toward the center.  Intermediate
 between the two extremes are clusters that display some of the
 characteristics of both regular and irregular clusters; in some
 instances these consist of a central elliptical concentration
 surrounded by a halo or disk of more thinly-distributed galaxies.
 The forms of the clusters unavoidably call to mind the analogous
 forms of galaxies themselves:  To some degree spherical clusters
 resemble spherical galaxies, irregular clusters resemble irregular
 galaxies, and intermediate clusters are not wholly-unlike spiral
 galaxies, with their mixture of characteristics of both types.  Our
 curiosity about this parallel deepens when we learn that the sort of
 galaxies predominant in each cluster is closely-related to the form of
 the cluster itself.  The spherical clusters have the largest plurality
 of elliptical and SO galaxies, while irregular clusters are dominated
 by spirals there and have relatively-few ellipticals and SOs.  And
 what spiral galaxies there are in spherical clusters tend to
 segregated toward the out regions, or halo, of the cluster -- much as
 globular clusters occupy halos surrounding elliptical galaxies.  The
 evidence seems compelling that the form taken on by a galaxy cannot
 have been determined solely by forces internal to that galaxy, but
 must reflect something of the milieu of the cluster to which it
 belongs.
 Having taken this step up the hierarchical ladder, we are
 inclined to take an additional step and inquire whether clusters of
 galaxies belong to still-larger associations.  Here again our
 curiosity is rewarded.  Many of the clusters prove to be members of
 superclusters -- clusters of clusters of galaxies.
 Clusters of galaxies typically occupy volumes of space with
 diameters of roughly thirty- or forty-million light-years.  The
 diameters of supercluster are ten times greater, on the order of
 three hundred to four hundred-million light-years.  Even on this scale
 we find evidence of order and consistency.  Some of the superclusters
 consist of a central zone where clusters of galaxies are relatively-
 concentrated, surrounded by a flattened disk of more thinly-
 distributed clusters, an arrangement at least faintly-reminiscent of
 the structure of spiral galaxies.  And possible superclusters, too,
 are rotating.
 Now when we look back to our home galaxy we may view it in a
 supergalactic context.  The Local Group is a small cluster of galaxies
 located in the outskirts of the Local Supercluster.  Many of our
 neighboring small clusters -- the M81 Group, the M101 Group, the
 Sculptor Group -- are likewise members of the Local Supercluster.  The
 supercluster consists of a concentrated core, designating the Virgo
 Cluster, and an extended halo to which the Local Group and its
 neighboring groups belong.
 A few of us gather in the observation dome after dinner.  We trace
 out for one another the structure of the Local Supercluster spread out
 before us, as once long ago we mapped the disk of our home galaxy.  We
 talk of the old mystery that closes the circle of life -- that the
 incomprehensible thing about nature, in Einstein's phrase, is our
 ability to comprehend it.  However fast we go or far we travel, we
 have not fled one micron from this mystery.  We can feel its breath,
 touch its face; it is our breath, our face.
 The first mate stand and quotes a sentence from Carl Friedrich von
 Weizacker, a physicist and philosopher of science who lived millions
 of years ago on Earth.  "All our thinking about nature must
 necessarily move in circles or spirals, for we can only understand
 nature if we think about her, and we can only think because our brain
 is built in accordance with nature's laws."
 The captain runs a hand through his white hair.
 "Spirals," he says.  "Our thinking expands as it circles.  It
 moves in spirals."
 
 VI / A Journey Toward the Edge of the Universe
 
 Now comes an end to our journeying.  Millions of years have passed on
 the planet of our birth; decades aboard.  Clusters of galaxies pass
 abeam and are recorded in the logbooks as once we recorded the passing
 of stars and later of galaxies.  The time has come to turn the ship
 around and decelerate until it can be brought to rest on a planet.  We
 owe this much to the younger generations, who never saw the Earth and
 have known only this life of ceaseless exploration.  But for us elders
 it is the beginning of the end.  Deceleration will take a long time,
 and we cannot hope to live to see the day when our crew will step out
 onto planetary soil, under planetary skies.
 On the day when the deceleration order is to be given, we few
 survivors of the original crew gather in the observation dome fr a
 last look at the cosmos while our ship is at its peak velocity.  Few
 visit the observation dome any longer -- to swim among the galaxies is
 unremarkable to those who have known no other surroundings -- but to
 our old eyes the view remains awesome and a little frightening.  The
 time-dilation effect having sped up the workings of the spiral
 galaxies that lie ahead of us by a factor of several million, they
 spangle with the light of millions of newly-formed stars, and still
 more brilliant supernovae flash and crackle across them by the
 hundreds.
 The captain rises with difficulty and proposes a toast.  "To the
 unattainable goal," he calls, his glass raised toward the dome and to
 the galaxies in array.  "To the edge of the universe."
 "Hear, hear," we respond.  How often we have talked about the edge
 of the universe, mapped it with our telescopes, saluted it with this
 same toast.  The phenomenon is as familiar to us as our names.
 When we look across space we are also looking back in time.  At
 distances of up to a few billion light-years, we see galaxies as they
 were recently in cosmic history, looking much like those that lie
 nearby.  At distances of five- to ten-billion light-years we are
 seeing younger galaxies whose light set out on its journey when the
 universe was about half its present age.  At distances approaching
 fifteen-billion light-years what we see are the brilliant beacons of
 galaxies being formed; they pour out huge quantities of energy, by
 comparison to which the births of stars in the contemporary cosmos
 seem but a bland resemblance, like fire-crackers set off to celebrate
 the anniversary of a revolution.  At these distances we are seeing the
 denizens of a young cosmos, all light and noise.
 The captain, projecting into cosmic time the tendency of the old
 to aggrandize the historical, sometimes speaks of events fifteen-
 billion years ago as if he had been alive then, rather than having
 only witnessed them vicariously by telescope.  "That was when galaxies
 were _galaxies,"_ he likes to say.  "The juice squeezed out of ten-
 thousand stars in a year.  Stars blowing up with every tick of the
 clock.  Energy aplenty -- you could singe your hair just by steeping
 outdoors -- and galaxies crowded so close together there was scarcely
 room to pass between them.  A pilot had to keep on his toes in those
 days.
 If we search with our telescopes for galaxies more distant than
 those at some fifteen-billion light-years, we see nothing.  At these
 distances we are looking back to a time before the primordial stuff of
 the universe had cooled sufficiently to congeal into stars and
 galaxies.  That is what we mean by the edge of the universe -- a
 temporal threshhold marking the point in cosmic history before which
 darkness prevailed.  It is an edge not of space but of time, and to
 visit it we would need not our spaceship, but a timeship able to
 travel into the past.
 "To the unattainable goal."  The first mate echoes the toast.
 "Faster than the galaxies."
 This is a traditional riposte, one that refers to the expansion of
 the universe.  The farther away a given galaxy we observe, the faster
 it is receding from us (or us from it, as you prefer) as it takes part
 in the universal expansion.  In all directions we see galaxies on the
 threshhold of the universe hurtling away from us, trains out of the
 past running on rails of the past, their lights the markers of the
 unattainable past.
 The captain orders the ship brought about.
 "Faster than the galaxies," the first mate repeats.  "Fast as
 light."  A mathematical witticism contained in special relativity
 prescribes that the fuel bill to accelerate any particle of matter to
 the speed of light would be infinite, would include the conversion of
 everything -- itself included -- into energy.
 "Maybe the young folks are right to want to stop," the captain
 says.  "They probably figure that otherwise we'd go on forever, that
 we'd burn up the whole universe in order to cross it.  They figure
 we'd be firing up the boilers with tables and chairs when we'd left
 not one star shining in the sky."
 "Don't worry, Captain," says the mate.  "There will always  be
 space travelers."
 "Always have been," the captain replies.  "We were space travelers
 before we ever left Earth.  See that galaxy over there?"  He extends a
 gaunt finger.  "When _they_ look at the Milky Way, don't they see it
 speeding away at ten per cent the speed of light?  And that galaxy
 over there, don't they see it moving at twenty per cent the speed of
 light?  And those millions of galaxies off near the edge, don't they
 see our galaxy moving almost fast as light itself, just as we see
 them?  Aren't we teetering on the edge of the universe, so far as
 they're concerned?  Isn't it _our_ part of the universe that's young
 and blinding brilliant, so says the old light that left here so long
 ago and only now is reaching them?
 "We are all space travelers, gentlemen.  We are.  They are.  All
 are."
 The galaxies wheel across the sky as the ship is turned end-for-
 end.
 "Let us show a light," says the captain.  He produces a kerosene-
 burning ship's lantern, a treasured antique.  He lights the wick,
 replaces the glass, and holds the brass lantern up to the windows of
 the dome.  Its yellow flame mingles with the light of the galaxies.
 "In a moment this flame will belong to our past," he says.  "But
 it belongs to _their_ future.  Maybe one day an astronomer in one of
 those galaxies whose telescope is pointed the right way at the right
 time will catch this flicker from our little lantern.  Just a couple
 of million miles' worth of light falling into the telescope, gone in
 a couple of seconds."
 The captain blows out the lantern, sets it on the floor, takes
 the con and gives the order to fire the engines.
 "It's not so bad to be old, gentlemen," he says.  "We're part of
 the future of most of the universe."
 
 -- Timothy Ferris,
 an excerpt from _Galaxies_
 
 
 (>
 
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