I don't understand why not if you were right outside of it. You'd see the nearby stars while the far areas would appear white, right??
Even if you were in Earth orbit with no atmosphere or city lights in the way, your naked eye could only discern stars within a few dozen parsecs, maybe a few hundred for the brighter ones. Our galaxy is a hundred thousand light-years across. Even if you were "right outside of it," most of it would just be too dim for your naked eyes to see. If you think about it, that's just common sense. If you could see the galaxy clearly from outside it, then from our position inside it, the night sky would be perpetually white, not black. The reason the night sky is dark is because most of the galaxy's stars are too far away to see with the naked eye. And if you move outside the galaxy, they get even farther away. At best, from a position not far outside the galaxy, you could make it out as a faint gray blur.
On a good day, in a good position, you can see Andromeda Galaxy over 2 billion light years away with a naked eye. The fact that you can't see Milky Way clearly is due to light pollution. Milky Way, of course, got the name because Romans saw it with a naked eye on a clear night.
That doesn't make any sense to me at all. I'm not asking to see blinding light like a 100 watt light bulb right in my face. I'm talking about seeing a swirly spiral of the galaxy. No matter how far the stars are, they still give of light which travels at light speed. If you are in a spot right outside of the galaxy, that light would reach you. Some light, released 1000s of years ago would reach you at the same time as other light released only 100's of years ago. That and the dust would make everything look blurry, but you could see it no question about that.
On a good day, in a good position, you can see Andromeda Galaxy over 2 billion light years away with a naked eye.
The fact that you can't see Milky Way clearly is due to light pollution. Milky Way, of course, got the name because Romans saw it with a naked eye on a clear night.
So if we were to be perpendicular to the Milky Way, we wouldn't see the Milky Way like we see it in the artist renderings and illustrations?
So we wouldn't see something like this?
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Not with the naked eye, no. As I said above, astronomical pictures like that are created by taking long exposures with sensitive telescopes, and generally by artificially enhancing the images with false or exaggerated colors. Open that image in an editing program, dial down the brightness, contrast, and color saturation considerably, and then you'll approach what the unassisted human eye could probably make out.
Here's a nice pic I found...They're pretty faint unless you're just about inside one -- for example, think how the Milky Way gets washed out of the night sky by lights in towns and cities. M31, the Andromeda Galaxy is 2.5 million light years away and 3 degrees across as seen from Earth (6 time the apparent diameter of the Moon) yet it only looks like a faint smudge to the eye.
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