What will be the future of our Milky Way galaxy in thousands of years. (An article by Greg Racklin and Fred Adams, an excerpt from "Astronomy" Celebrating the Milky Way Millennium "in November 2001) We were looking forward to the new Millennium a while ago. For many of us, this is an important event in our life. But on a large scale, the new century does not appear to be important. Mr. Greg Laughlin and Mr. Fred Adam wrote, "Even if we do astronomical observations, celebrations far away are still Milky Way."
According to the well-known forecast of the Milky Way billions of years ago, our planets gathered together and it will be billions of years ago that it can not live. Unlike most redshifted galaxies made by the slight expansion pressure of the universe, the Andromeda galaxy and the Milky Way are blue shifted due to a highly concentrated gravity black hole. Therefore, these super large objects do not enter the space, but they are locked in an inevitable collision process. Therefore, for billions of years these mysterious celestial bodies will merge into an ominous and spectacular group that potentially creates a night of devastating destruction.
In a recently published Naturally Active Galaxy Nuclei (AGN) article this article is formed by the collision of two galaxies and is called IRAS F 23128 - 5919 using a very large telescope (VLT). A test was conducted (Maiolino et al., 2017). The huge black hole gravity field absorbs substances, stars, and asteroids of the Milky Way. The huge black hole gravitational field is very powerful, it consumes galaxies. It can be seen as a vacuum in a clean space. When a black hole consumes stars and materials that exist between galaxies that collide, it emits gas with small supergiants and other types of stars. At birth some of these stars are released at a higher rate in the gas, which moves these young stars from the active galactic nucleus (AGN) hundreds, thousands of light years apart with a number of black holes.