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Chapter 21, Section 4
Star Systems and Galaxies
Based on Prentice Hall
Textbook by Rusty Sturken
May, 2009
Background imaghttp://mayda.com/astro/Img/M31_LRGB-03C-1k.jpge from http://mayda.c
Star Systems
• More than half of all stars are
members of groups of two or
more stars. Our sun is not.
• Star systems with two stars
are called double stars or
binary stars.
• Star systems with three
stars are called triple stars.
Binary Systems
• Often astronomers can detect the
presence of a star in a binary system
without seeing it, they can tell it is there
by observing the effect of its gravity on
the second star
• Sometimes with binary stars, one star
blocks the light from the other star and
the system is called an eclipsing binary
Eclipsing Binary
http://calgary.rasc.ca/images/Algol_Eclipsing.gif
Planets around other stars
• Scientists have discovered planets
around stars by observing how a star
“wobbles” very slightly back and forth
• Over 300 “extrasolar” planets have
been found according to Space.com
• Most of the extrasolar planets found so
far are massive gas giants with large
influence on their star’s gravity.
Saturday, April 2nd, 2005
Astronomers Photograph Extrasolar
Planet
“First ever photo of an extrasolar planet, a Jupiter-sized gas giant.”
http://www.utahskies.org/image_library/deepsky/misc/top.extrasolar.planet.photo.jpg
Where to look for Earthlike
planets
• The so-called "habitable zone"
around a star is a belt in which liquid
water could exist on the surface in
lakes, rivers or oceans. Too close to
its stellar parent and a planet would
be too hot, while an orbit too far out
would yield only a frozen world,
NASA scientists have said.
Quote from http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/090416-kepler-first-images.html
Galaxies
• Galaxies are giant structures that
contain hundreds of billions of stars,
Oh, by the way…There are billions of
galaxies in the universe
• Galaxies contain single stars, double
stars, star systems and lots of gas and
dust between the stars.
• Astronomers classify most galaxies
into three main categories:
– spiral galaxies,
– elliptical galaxies,
– irregular galaxies
Spiral Galaxies
• Spiral galaxies have arms that
spiral outward, like pinwheels
http://zoo1.galaxyzoo.org/images/
tutorial/example_face_on_spiral.jpg
http://www.spacetoday.org/images/Hubble/
HubbleBeauty/NGC1512BarredSpiralGalaxy.jpg
The Milky Way
• Our solar system exists in the Milky
Way galaxy, and is about 25,000 lightyears away from the center of the Milky
Way
• Our solar system is about two-thirds of
the way out on one of the spiral arms of
the Milky Way
• We can’t see the center of the Milky
Way due to the massive cloud of gas
and dust between the sun and the
center
The Milky Way
http://abyss.uoregon.edu/%7Ejs/images/milky_way_large.jpg
The Milky Way
http://www.crystalinks.com/galaxymilkyway.jpg
Elliptical Galaxies
• Elliptical galaxies look like
flattened balls
• Have little gas and dust between
the stars so new stars can not form
– Ellliptical galaxies only contain old
stars
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/
jpegMod/PIA08696_modest.jpg
Elliptical Galaxy
http://zuserver2.star.ucl.ac.uk/%7Eidh/apod/image/0406/m87_cfht.jpg
Irregular Galaxies
• Some galaxies don’t have a regular
shape, they are called irregular galaxies
• The Large Magellanic Cloud is an
irregular galaxy
http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/
159426main_image_feature_666_ys_4.jpg
Irregular Galaxy
http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/Images/StarChild/universe_level2/ngc6822.gif
Irregular Galaxy
http://www.astro.utu.fi/news/img/RGB_bird_idl600.jpeg