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#center#stars#earth#farther#younger#galaxy#starting#astronomers#looking#https

Discussion (12 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

layer8about 2 hours ago
dotancohenabout 3 hours ago
Is this a non-sequiter or just poorly phrased?

  > Disk galaxies like the Milky Way form stars “inside-out” — starting from the center and working outwards through the disk. So, as a general rule, the farther out astronomers look, the younger the stars are.
Do they meant looking out from Earth (which is actually nearer to the center of a spiral arm than to either end) or out from the galactic bulge. Either way doesn't make sense.
ww5209 minutes ago
Looking from Earth at the stars closer to the center of a galaxy, they are found to be older. Looking from Earth at the stars closer to the edge of a galaxy, they are found to be younger.
malfistabout 1 hour ago
When does "starting in the center" mean anything besides "starting in the center"?

The earth is not the center of the galaxy

_factorabout 2 hours ago
Poorly phrased. The most recent stars are on the edges. The inner stars were first, hence the “working outwards”.
happytoexplainabout 1 hour ago
I actually am not following what the ambiguity is - stars farther out from the center are younger, no?
kadoban35 minutes ago
The Earth isn't the center of the galaxy, so this feels confusing/confused:

> So, as a general rule, the farther out astronomers look, the younger the stars are.

JumpCrisscross31 minutes ago
Try: "the farther out [from the center] astronomers look"
colechristensenabout 2 hours ago
It is beyond obvious what they mean.
nealsabout 3 hours ago
Just the daily post that makes me feel small and insignificant.
dylan604about 3 hours ago
I prefer that feeling much more than the modern sense from social media where everyone is abnormally important
yrcyrcabout 2 hours ago
Great. Next Laniakea