1” “Sky-Notes” of the Open University Astronomy Club. April 2006. 1
... NGC5033 (11.0) sg. Appears in the same low power wide field as NGC5005. NGC5055 (M63) (8.6) sg. Easily located 5o east and slightly north of M94. Oval patch with brighter core. NGC5194 (M51) (8.4), sg and NGC5195 (9.3). Interacting pair of galaxies. Aptly named the Whirlpool galaxy M51 was the first ...
... NGC5033 (11.0) sg. Appears in the same low power wide field as NGC5005. NGC5055 (M63) (8.6) sg. Easily located 5o east and slightly north of M94. Oval patch with brighter core. NGC5194 (M51) (8.4), sg and NGC5195 (9.3). Interacting pair of galaxies. Aptly named the Whirlpool galaxy M51 was the first ...
Learning Objectives Weeks 9-11 . 1. Know that star birth can begin
... 9. Know that stars of moderately low mass die by gently ejecting their outer layers, creating planetary nebulae. 10. The burned-out core of a moderately low-mass star cools and contracts until it becomes a white dwarf. A white dwarf is kept from collapsing by the pressure of its degenerate electrons ...
... 9. Know that stars of moderately low mass die by gently ejecting their outer layers, creating planetary nebulae. 10. The burned-out core of a moderately low-mass star cools and contracts until it becomes a white dwarf. A white dwarf is kept from collapsing by the pressure of its degenerate electrons ...
galaxy_physics
... – About 10% of star mass – Collisional lose energy by radiation – Can settle to bottom of potential and make stars • Disk plane : gas creates disk stars (“cold” with small scale height) ...
... – About 10% of star mass – Collisional lose energy by radiation – Can settle to bottom of potential and make stars • Disk plane : gas creates disk stars (“cold” with small scale height) ...
Irregular galaxies
... Barred Spiral Galaxies • The creation of the bar is generally thought to be the result of a density wave radiating from the center of the galaxy • Bars are thought to be a temporary phenomenon in the life of spiral galaxies, the bar structure decaying over time, transforming the galaxy from a ba ...
... Barred Spiral Galaxies • The creation of the bar is generally thought to be the result of a density wave radiating from the center of the galaxy • Bars are thought to be a temporary phenomenon in the life of spiral galaxies, the bar structure decaying over time, transforming the galaxy from a ba ...
scale of the universe
... • If our galaxy were a marble (1 cm in diameter) then the observable universe would be 1.3 km in diameter • Suppose we wanted to travel there? • It would take tens of billions of years Earth time each way. • 100 billion galaxies in universe. ...
... • If our galaxy were a marble (1 cm in diameter) then the observable universe would be 1.3 km in diameter • Suppose we wanted to travel there? • It would take tens of billions of years Earth time each way. • 100 billion galaxies in universe. ...
Document
... • Barred Spirals – bar-shaped nucleus (jet??); as many as ordinary spirals; bar rotates like solid; spiral arms emerge from either end (SBa, SBb, SBc) • Irregulars – chaotic structure, no systematic rotation, many dwarf irregular galaxies (classified as “dI”) ...
... • Barred Spirals – bar-shaped nucleus (jet??); as many as ordinary spirals; bar rotates like solid; spiral arms emerge from either end (SBa, SBb, SBc) • Irregulars – chaotic structure, no systematic rotation, many dwarf irregular galaxies (classified as “dI”) ...
Physics - Content by Unit
... Fresh evidence from the Andromeda galaxy At about the same time, astronomers Kent Ford and Vera Cooper Rubin at the Carnegie Institution of Washington began a detailed study of the motion of stars in the nearby galaxy of Andromeda. Galaxies are so large that even stars traveling at 200 kilometers pe ...
... Fresh evidence from the Andromeda galaxy At about the same time, astronomers Kent Ford and Vera Cooper Rubin at the Carnegie Institution of Washington began a detailed study of the motion of stars in the nearby galaxy of Andromeda. Galaxies are so large that even stars traveling at 200 kilometers pe ...
Messier 87
Messier 87 (also known as Virgo A or NGC 4486, and generally abbreviated to M87) is a supergiant elliptical galaxy in the constellation Virgo. One of the most massive galaxies in the local universe, it is notable for its large population of globular clusters—M87 contains about 12,000 compared to the 150-200 orbiting the Milky Way—and its jet of energetic plasma that originates at the core and extends outward at least 1,500 parsecs (4,900 light-years), travelling at relativistic speed. It is one of the brightest radio sources in the sky, and is a popular target for both amateur astronomy observations and professional astronomy study.French astronomer Charles Messier discovered M87 in 1781, cataloguing it as a nebulous feature while searching for objects that would confuse comet hunters. The second brightest galaxy within the northern Virgo Cluster, M87 is located about 16.4 million parsecs (53.5 million light-years) from Earth. Unlike a disk-shaped spiral galaxy, M87 has no distinctive dust lanes. Instead, it has an almost featureless, ellipsoidal shape typical of most giant elliptical galaxies, diminishing in luminosity with distance from the centre. Forming around one sixth of M87's mass, the stars in this galaxy have a nearly spherically symmetric distribution, their density decreasing with increasing distance from the core. At the core is a supermassive black hole, which forms the primary component of an active galactic nucleus. This object is a strong source of multiwavelength radiation, particularly radio waves. M87's galactic envelope extends out to a radius of about 150 kiloparsecs (490,000 light-years), where it has been truncated—possibly by an encounter with another galaxy. Between the stars is a diffuse interstellar medium of gas that has been chemically enriched by elements emitted from evolved stars.