Comparison image of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies, highlighting their structure ahead of a future galactic collision in the Local Group.

In the vast stillness of the cosmos, even galaxies are on the move. And some are on a direct course toward each other. The two largest galaxies in our Local Galactic Group—the Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy (M31)—are not just neighbors; they are destined to collide.

This isn’t science fiction. It’s a scientifically predicted future, backed by precise measurements, simulations, and models. And when it happens—around 4 to 5 billion years from now—it will completely transform the structure of our cosmic neighborhood.

In this series, we explore the dynamics of the Milky Way–Andromeda collision, how it will unfold, and what it means for the future of the Local Group, including the fate of stars, planets, dark matter halos, and more.


Meet the Players: Two Titans of the Local Group

The Milky Way

Andromeda Galaxy (M31)

These two galaxies dominate the Local Group both in mass and gravitational influence. Their mutual attraction is already pulling them closer—and nothing will stop the inevitable.


How We Know a Collision Is Coming

Astronomers use a combination of:

This data makes it one of the best-known and most predictable galactic collisions in the universe.


What Makes This Collision So Important?


Cosmic Events Unfold Slowly—but Powerfully

The upcoming collision between the Milky Way and Andromeda (M31) is not a sudden crash, but a slow, majestic gravitational dance that will play out over billions of years. Though stars are so far apart that direct stellar collisions are rare, the galactic structures, dark matter halos, and orbital dynamics will undergo radical transformations.

In this part, we walk through the four major phases of the merger—what will happen, when it will happen, and what it means for the galaxies involved.


Phase 1: First Close Approach (~4 Billion Years from Now)

This is when the visible disturbance begins, and the serene spirals will start to stretch and warp.


Phase 2: Rebound and Second Encounter (~4.5–5 Billion Years)

This phase ends with spirals effectively destroyed, and the merger well underway.


Phase 3: Final Coalescence (~5–6 Billion Years)

Scientists have dubbed the result “Milkomeda” or “Milkdromeda”—a new type of galaxy that combines the histories of both.


Phase 4: Relaxation and Settling (~6–10 Billion Years)

This final state marks the long-term future of our Local Group, shaped by this one monumental event.


What Will the Final Galaxy Look Like?

FeaturePrediction
ShapeLikely an elliptical or lenticular galaxy
Star PopulationMixture of old stars from both systems, possibly with a faint halo of new stars
CoreA merged supermassive black hole of several hundred million solar masses
Spiral StructureCompletely disrupted—no visible spiral arms remaining

Simulations using data from Hubble and GAIA support this likely outcome, but minor variations (e.g., involving M33) are possible.


When Galaxies Collide, Do Stars Collide Too?

The upcoming Milky Way–Andromeda merger sounds catastrophic—but what does it mean for individual stars, our solar system, and the supermassive black holes at the galactic centers?

While the event will completely reshape the structure of both galaxies, the fate of stars, stellar systems, and central black holes will be guided more by gravity than destruction. In this part, we explore what scientists predict will happen to the contents of each galaxy during this monumental cosmic transformation.


Will Stars Collide? Almost Certainly Not

Despite the scale of the event, stars themselves are extremely unlikely to collide. Why?

Conclusion: The Milky Way and Andromeda will mix their stars, not smash them.


What Happens to the Sun and Our Solar System?

Our solar system will not be spared from change, but not in the apocalyptic sense:

Importantly, Earth and the other planets will remain gravitationally bound to the Sun. Life (if still present) would experience no direct cosmic collisions.


Will the Night Sky Look Different? Absolutely

As Andromeda approaches and merges:

Astronomers believe future observers (if any) will witness a dramatic and evolving cosmic panorama.


What About the Supermassive Black Holes?

Each galaxy has a central black hole:

What will happen:

This will be one of the most energetic black hole mergers in the nearby universe—though it’s still billions of years away.


Gravitational Effects on Stellar Orbits

RegionLikely Outcome
Inner Disk StarsWill scatter into new elliptical orbits
Outer Disk StarsSome may be thrown into tidal streams or halo structures
Dwarf SatellitesWill be captured, disrupted, or absorbed by the merger remnant
Globular ClustersMay shift into new halo distributions or become part of tidal bridges

The resulting galaxy will have a blended stellar population, with dynamically heated orbits and a spheroidal shape.


When Two Become One – Enter Milkomeda

Visual representation of Milkomeda, the hypothetical galaxy formed from the future merger of the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies.

The merger of the Milky Way and Andromeda will not just reshape their internal structures—it will create an entirely new galaxy, often referred to as Milkomeda (or Milkdromeda). This massive elliptical or lenticular system will dominate the Local Group, altering the region’s dynamics and identity for the rest of cosmic time.

In this final part, we explore the long-term outcome of the merger, the future structure of the Local Group, and what this means for our place in the universe.


Milkomeda – The Resulting Galaxy

Simulations suggest that the merger will produce a galaxy that is:

This new galaxy will resemble giant ellipticals seen in clusters, but will be a product of just two major spirals merging in a relatively quiet group environment.


The Fate of the Local Group

After the merger, the Local Group will no longer be “two giants surrounded by dwarfs.” Instead, it will become:

Conclusion: The Local Group will evolve from a loose galaxy group into a merged central system, slowly collecting its remaining members.


Long-Term Cosmic Outlook

Within ~100 Billion Years:

Implication:


Key Scientific Questions the Merger Helps Address

QuestionWhy the Merger Matters
How do massive galaxies evolve?This will be one of the few mergers between equals we can model before it happens
What happens to dark matter during mergers?Observing halo interactions helps refine cosmological simulations
How do black holes merge and grow?Offers insight into gravitational wave production and AGN activation
How stable are star systems during galactic reshuffling?Helps test models of stellar orbital dynamics and system survival

The Milky Way–Andromeda merger isn’t just an event—it’s a cosmic laboratory.


Final Thoughts: A Future Shaped by Gravity

The Local Group is currently defined by two great spirals—but gravity has other plans. In time, it will become a single, massive galaxy, reshaping not only our cosmic neighborhood but also our understanding of how galaxies grow, merge, and evolve.

For now, we watch from the inside—but thanks to astronomy, we already know the ending.