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If we represent the Milky Way Galaxy as the size of a grapefruit (10-cm diameter), the distance to the Andromeda Galaxy would be about

A) 10 cm.
B) 3 m.
C) 30 m.
D) 1 km.
E) 100 km

1 Answer

6 votes

Final answer:

When the Milky Way is scaled down to a 10-cm diameter grapefruit, the distance to the Andromeda Galaxy would be about 2.5 meters, which can be rounded to option B) 3 m.

Step-by-step explanation:

If we represent the Milky Way Galaxy as the size of a grapefruit with a 10-cm diameter, the question asks how far away the Andromeda Galaxy would be at this scale. The actual diameter of the Milky Way is about 100,000 light-years, and the distance to the Andromeda Galaxy is approximately 2.5 million light-years. This means Andromeda is about 25 times the diameter of the Milky Way away from us.

In scaling terms, if the Milky Way's 100,000 light-year diameter shrinks to 10 cm, then one light-year at this scale would be 0.0001 cm. Calculating the scaled distance to Andromeda (2.5 million light-years * 0.0001 cm/light-year), we get 250 cm, which is 2.5 meters. Therefore, at the grapefruit scale for the Milky Way, the distance to the Andromeda Galaxy would be approximately 2.5 meters or option B) 3 m. Note that rounding slightly up to the nearest meter gives us a realistic and understandable estimate for the purposes of this analogy.

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