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Cosmic Giant Takes on Galactic Dwarf in Adorable Video

When galaxies collide, the larger galaxy may squash star formation in the smaller galaxy.

What happens when a cosmic bully collides with a galactic dwarf? The big guy comes out on top, according to a new study.

Sometimes size does matter: In a survey of more than 20,000 merged galaxies, researchers found that star formation sped up in the larger of two galaxies, but nearly came to a halt in the smaller one. When the two galaxies are of roughly equal mass, they both see an increase in star formation. You can watch an adorable video explaining the new results here on Space.com.

The cause of this unbalanced outcome may be due to the larger galaxy slurping up the smaller galaxy's supply of gas, from which new stars form.

When two galaxies collide, astronomers suspect that clouds of gas inside the galaxy get churned up and seed new star birth faster than if the two galaxies remained separate, and tranquil. But as the new study shows, this isn't the case for smaller galaxies.

"This might be because the bigger galaxy strips away its smaller companion's gas, leaving it without star-forming fuel or because it stops the smaller galaxy obtaining the new gas required to form more stars," said Luke Davies, of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) at the University of Western Australia, and author of the new research.

The findings may one day have big implications for star formation in the Milky Way galaxy, which is on a collision course with the nearby Andromeda galaxy. The two neighbors are moving toward each other at 248,548 mph (400,000 kilometers per hour).

"Don't panic yet, the two won't smash into each other for another four billion years or so," Davies said in a statement.

The two relatively large galaxies ("cosmic tanks," he calls them) are of a similar mass, so it's more likely that the collision will spur star formation in both of them.

"Investigating such cosmic collisions lets us better understand how galaxies grow and evolve," Davies said.

The new research employed the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey using the Anglo-Australian Telescope in New South Wales, and was published online on July 12 in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

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