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The Milky Way Galaxy
A. Expert - I have done a lot of reading in this area
already.
B. Above Average - I have learned some information
about this topic.
C. Moderate - I know a little about this topic.
D. Rookie - I am a blank slate … but ready to learn.
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Andromeda
Kapteyn
Magellanic
Sagittarius
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Chapter Overview
 The Milky Way Galaxy
 What Lies Beyond
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Lesson Overview
 The Milky Way Galaxy and the Sun’s
Place In It
 The Four Components of the Galaxy
 Other Planetary Systems
 Black Holes
 The Center of the Milky Way Galaxy
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
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1.
2.
3.
4.
Planets that orbit stars outside
5.
A spiral galaxy's central region
the Solar System
6.
Outermost part of a spiral galaxy
Distance light travels in a vacuum 7.
Spherical group of thousands of
in one year
stars
Astronomical unit equal to 3.26
8.
Outer halo
light-years
9.
Electrically neutral particle
Large, flat part of a spiral galaxy
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10. Star-like object, gives off light, lacks sufficient mass
11. Rotating neutron star that emits beams of radio
12. Two stars that revolve around each other
13. Astronomy branch, measure positions/motions of celestial objects
14. Temporary brightening of light from a distant star
15. Rotating disk of gas orbiting a star
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16. An object whose escape velocity exceeds the speed of light
17. The radius of a sphere around a black hole from within
which no light can escape
18. A star that grows brighter than usual for a time and then
returns to its original state
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What are your thoughts about
the possibility of discovering
another Earth-like planet?
The Milky Way and the Sun’s
Place in It
The Sun is one of about 200 billion stars
that make up the Milky Way Galaxy
Diameter ranges from about 100,000 to
about 160,000 light-years
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
The Shape of the Galaxy
Stars are arranged
in a wheel-shaped
disk that circles
around a bulging
center
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
The Sun’s Location in the
Milky Way
 Sun is about one-third to one-half of the way out
from the galaxy’s center
 Not too long ago scientists thought that the Sun
was at least fairly near the galaxy’s center
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
WOW!
Fact: If you shrank
the sun down to the
size of a white blood
cell and shrunk the
Milky Way galaxy
down using the same
scale, the Milky Way
would be the size of
the United States
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Andromeda, a Galaxy Similar to
the Milky Way
Almost everything you can see in the sky
is in the Milky Way Galaxy
Andromeda is visible in the autumn sky as
a fuzzy patch
2.9T
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
M31: The Andromeda
Galaxy
31st of 103 objects
on Charles
Messier's list of
diffuse sky objects
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Gaia Probe
video
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Astrometry Through the Ages
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
The Four Components of
the Galaxy
1. The Galaxy Disk
 A galaxy disk is the large, flat part of a
spiral galaxy, rotating around its center
 Contains individual stars, clusters of stars,
and almost all the gas and dust found in the
galaxy
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
The Four Components of
the Galaxy, cont.
2. The Central Region of the Galaxy
 The nuclear bulge is a spiral galaxy’s
central region
 Milky Way Galaxy’s nuclear bulge is about
2,000 parsecs, or 6,500 light-years, in
diameter
 Packed more densely with stars, dust, and
gas than any other part of the galaxy
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
The Four Components of
the Galaxy, cont.
3. The Halo
 Galaxy’s halo is the outermost part of a
spiral galaxy, nearly spherical and lying
beyond the spiral
 A globular cluster is a spherical group
of up to hundreds of thousands of stars,
found primarily in a galaxy’s halo
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
The Four Components of
the Galaxy, cont.
4. The Galactic Corona
 Beyond the galaxy’s halo lies the galactic
corona, or outer halo
 Scientists don’t know what the corona
consists of, but think it may include small
black holes, cool dwarf stars, large numbers
of neutrinos, and other exotic particles
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Black Holes
A black hole is an
object whose escape
velocity exceeds the
speed of light
Escape velocity is the
speed at which an
object must travel to
“escape” a star’s
gravity
A growing black hole, called a quasar,
can be seen at the center of a faraway
galaxy in this artist's concept
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech
Black Holes, cont.
The Three Measurements of a Black Hole:
1. Mass
2. Electric charge,
either positive or
negative
3. Angular momentum
video
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Courtesy of NASA/CXC/M. Weiss
Black Holes, cont.
How Scientists Detect Black Holes:
Because the gravitational field near a
black hole would be so strong, any matter
nearby would orbit very fast
This hot material would radiate energy
It would appear as an X-ray source
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
The Center of the
Milky Way Galaxy
To observe the galactic nucleus, scientists
use wavelengths in the infrared/radio part
of the spectrum or in X-rays and gamma
rays
The massive-black-hole hypothesis seems
to be the best explanation for the energy
source in the Milky Way Galaxy and other
similar galaxies
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
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Disk
Nuclear bulge
Halo
Galactic corona
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Pulsar
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Review
 The Milky Way Galaxy is made up of hundreds
of billions of stars that appear hazy from Earth
because the stars blur together
 The Andromeda Galaxy, which is very similar in
appearance to the Milky Way is about 2.9 million
light years away
 It took astronomers until the early twentieth
century to get a good understanding that the
nucleus of the Milky Way Galaxy has a massive
black hole
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
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Angular Momentum
Electric Charge
Mass
Size
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Summary
 The Milky Way Galaxy and the Sun’s
Place In It
 The Four Components of the Galaxy
 Other Planetary Systems
 Black Holes
 The Center of the Milky Way Galaxy
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Next…
Done – The Milky
Way Galaxy
Next – EXAM prep
Exam - 15 Dec 2016
Luminous Blue Variable
Chapter 4, Lesson 1
Courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/UC Berkeley
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Exoplanets
Dwarf planets
Galactic planets
Accretion planets
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Parsec
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Light-year
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Andromeda galaxy
Globular cluster
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