What Does Gravity Do in a Galaxy?

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Dark Matter

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Elliptical Galaxy
This is a picture of an early-stage galaxy before it has condensed into a disk shape. Gravity will eventually pull the matter
together into a defined shape we recognize as a spiral galaxy. First the galaxy will be flattened, then it will orient itself with
a spin, and finally it will develop arms and/or bars. All of this attraction between the mass present is due to gravity.
Image credit: apod.nasa.gov
on edgeGalaxy on Edge
Gravity plays a number of roles in a galaxy, pulling stars toward one another, flattening the collection of stars into a plane, causing
stars to slingshot past one another, and the creating a spin of the entire galaxy. While it may seem as though gravity between the stars plays
every role in the binding of a galaxy, calculations and simulations prove that the gravity interaction between stars and the
galactic center is not enough to keep galaxies together. What a galaxy needs is more mass than we can account for.
Dark matter is the solution to this baffling problem.
Image Credit: apod.nasa.gov