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Name:__SOLUTIONS______ _________ Section:___ NatSci102 In-Class Exercise This tutorial will give you a better understanding of the size of the Milky Way Galaxy by investigating the distances to objects within the Galaxy and to other objects in the Universe. Below is a picture of a spiral galaxy. This is a picture of NGC 3184, a spiral galaxy similar to the Milky Way. Because we are located within the Milky Way, we are unable to take a picture of our entire galaxy from the outside. Let’s assume that this picture represents our Milky Way Galaxy and has the dimensions labeled below. Note that in this picture, 1 centimeter (cm) represents 10,000 light-years (ly); equivalently you can use 1 millimeter (mm) to represent 1,000 light-years (ly). 50,000 ly center to edge Sun A B C E D 100,000 ly edge to edge 1) The Sun’s position in the Milky Way is shown in the picture above. What is the approximate distance from the Sun to the center of the Milky Way? Recall that 1.0 cm represents 10,000 ly. The distance is about 2.5 cm or 2.5cm x 10,000 light years/cm = 25,000 light years 2) The table below lists four bright stars in the night sky. Write the letter of the dot (A – E) from the picture above that best represents the location of each star. You can use letters more than once. Recall that 1 mm represents 1,000 ly. Star Vega Spica Rigel Deneb Distance from Sun (in light years) Letter Explanation A A A A Vega is 26ly/1000ly/mm = 0.026 mm from the Sun Spica is 260ly/1000ly/mm = 0.26 mm from the Sun Rigel is 810ly/1000ly/mm = 0.81 mm from the Sun Deneb is 1400ly/1000ly/mm = 1.4 mm from the Sun 26 260 810 1,400 This illustrates how big the Milky Way is! 3) We normally consider Deneb to be a bright but distant star at 1,400 ly away. Compared to the size of our galaxy, is Deneb truly distant? Explain your reasoning. Deneb is not truly distant – dot A is closest to representing is location relative to the Sun, and it is barely a separate dot from the Sun. Deneb is only 1.4% of the diameter of the Milky Way distant from the Sun! 4) Are the stars from question 2 inside or outside the Milky Way Galaxy? Explain your reasoning. They are inside the Milky Way – they are so close to the Sun that they must be part of the Milky Way since the Sun is. 5) The table below lists two Messier objects and their distances from the Sun. Write the letter of the dot (A – E) from the picture on the previous page that best represents the location of each object. You can use letters more than once. Messier object M1 (Crab Nebula) M71 Globular Cluster Distance from Sun (in light years) 6300 12,700 Letter B C Explanation M1 is 6300ly/1000ly/mm=6.3mm from the Sun M71 is 12700 ly/ 1000ly/mm= 12.7mm from the Sun 6) Are these Messier objects part of the Milky Way? Explain your reasoning. They are also part of the Milky Way because in any direction from the Sun the Milky Way extends more than 6.3 or 12.7mm from the Sun. 7) The Crab Nebula has a width of about 11 light years. If you wanted to accurately draw the Crab Nebula on your diagram, would you use a small blob or a tiny dot at the location you indicated? Explain your reasoning. Note: the dots marking the locations on the picture are about 1 mm across. A dot should be used as 11 light years = .011 mm, much smaller even than the size of the dots. 8) The Sun is much smaller than a nebula. We used a dot to represent the Sun’s location in the picture. Is this dot too small, too large or just the right size to represent the size of the Sun on the picture? Explain your reasoning. At the scale of the picture, the Sun should be much, much smaller than a dot so a dot is actually too large to represent the size of the Sun. In fact, the Sun’s diameter in light years is 1.4x10-8 light years = 1.4x10-11 mm so you could not see it as disk at the scale of the picture using even the best microscope known! 9) The Milky Way Galaxy is one of the largest galaxies in the Local Group. The following table lists the distances to the centers of t Local Group galaxies. Draw a dot on your picture (if possible) to represent the center of each galaxy. Don’t worry about the direction (left, right, up, or down) for each galaxy; just place a dot an appropriate distance from the Sun and label it with the galaxy’s name. Galaxy Distance from Sun Distance in cm (in light years) 80000ly/10000ly/cm = 8cm Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy 80,000 (SagDEG) – closest galaxy to Milky Way 2500000ly/10000ly/cm = 250cm Andromeda Galaxy (M31) 2,500,000 Do any of these galaxies fit on the page? Which one(s)? The Sagittarius Dwarf would fit.