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Which of the following is least easily explainable as a result of interaction between galaxies? a) Some galaxies have long "tails" of stars. b) Rich, regular clusters are dominated by central giant ellipticals. c) Both spiral and elliptical galaxies are seen at very high redshift. d) Some galaxies seems to be undergoing bursts of star formation. • Rich clusters: Rich and Poor Galaxy Clusters – Contain hundreds to thousands of member galaxies – Are roughly spherical, with the largest galaxies near the center – Contain mostly elliptical and type S0 galaxies – Lots of hot gas and dust • Poor clusters – Contain only tens of galaxies – Have a ragged, irregular appearance – More spiral and irregular galaxies 1 Superclusters • Clusters of clusters are called superclusters – Contain a few to many dozen clusters of galaxies – Can be Mpc across! – The Local Group is part of the Local Supercluster, shown at left. • The Local Supercluster is heading toward a region of space known as the Great Attractor, where there are a large number of massive superclusters • There may be super-superclusters! 2 The most likely reason that clusters of galaxies have more elliptical than spiral galaxies is that in the high density cluster environment a) spirals merge to form ellipticals. b) intracluster gas strips galaxies of the gas needed for star formation. c) near-misses between galaxies makes them rounder. d) galaxies are older and their brighter disk stars have burned out. Large Scale Structure in the Universe • Using modern technology, astronomers have mapped the location of galaxies and clusters of galaxies in three dimensions • Redshift is used to determine distance to these galaxies • Galaxies tend to form long chains or shells in space, surrounded by voids containing small or dim galaxies • This is as far as we can see! 3 Seyfert Galaxies • Seyfert galaxies are spiral galaxies with extremely luminous central bulges • Light output of the bulge is equal to the light output of the whole Milky Way! • Radiation from Seyfert galaxies fluctuates rapidly in intensity 4 Radio Galaxies • Radio Galaxies emit large amounts of energy in the radio part of the spectrum • Energy is generated in two regions – Galactic nucleus – Radio lobes on either side of the galaxy • Energy generated by energetic electrons – Synchrotron radiation – Electrons are part of the gas shooting out of the core in narrow jets Quasars • Quasars are small, extremely luminous, extremely distant galactic nuclei – Bright radio sources – Name comes from Quasi-Stellar Radio Source, as they appeared to be stars! – Can have clouds of gas near them, or jets racing from their cores – Spectra are heavily redshifted, meaning they are very far away – Energy output is equivalent to one supernova going off every hour! • The HST was able to image a quasar, showing it to be the active core of a distant galaxy 5 Energy Source for Active Galactic Nuclei • • • • • Active galactic nuclei emit a tremendous amount of radiation over a broad range of wavelengths A black hole can be both very small, and have an accretion disk that can emit enough radiation Likely that at the centers of these galactic nuclei, there are supermassive black holes Intense magnetic fields in the accretion disk pump superheated gas out into jets that leave the nucleus There are still many questions to be answered… Figure 77.08b 6