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Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The Galactic Center Lecture Lec 22: Galaxies 22 1 APOD: Prelim #2 Reminder Prelim #1 on Wed. Oct 24 Normal class time & location Format like Prelim #1 Will cover lectures 12 – 22 From Star Formation to today’s lecture Will post practice exam Lec 22: Galaxies 2 22 - 1 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies Public lecture tonight: Lecture Topics Milky Way Atomic and Molecular Gas The Galactic Center Mass of the Galaxy “Exploring the Universe from the South Pole” by John Carstrom (Hans Bethe Lecturer) 7:30 pm in Schwartz Auditorium Dark Matter Gas – Stars – Gas Cycle Formation of the Milky Way Lec 22: Galaxies 3 Atomic Gas Flattened pancake Radius > 20 kpc. Height ~ 250 pc in center, 1 kpc at 20 kpc Mass ~ 3x109 Msun, ~2/3 outside the orbit of the Sun around the Galactic Center. Distorted appearance at the fringes of the Galaxy. Interaction with LMC,SMC? Lec 22: Galaxies 4 22 - 2 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies Schematic of the atomic gas distribution 250 pc warp in the disk Galactic Center Sun 1 kpc 20 kpc Mgas ~ 3x109 Msun 5 Lec 22: Galaxies Molecular Gas Giant Molcular Clouds (GMCs): Size ~ 10 - 50 pc, Mass ~ 103 - 106 Msun Stars form in cores of GMCs. Mass ~ 3x109 Msun, ~2/3 inside the orbit of the Sun around the Galactic Center Lec 22: Galaxies 6 22 - 3 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The molecular gas distribution Molecular “Ring” from 4-8 kpc and concentration on GC Thickness ~ 120 pc. M ~ 2x108 Msun for GC clouds Sun Galactic Center “Ring” of GMCs at 4-8 kpc w/ M ~ 2x109 Msun Total mass of molecular gas ~ 3x109 Msun Lec 22: Galaxies 7 The Galactic Center What lies at the center of our Galaxy? Dust obscures the visible light from us Use radio and infrared observations Lec 22: Galaxies 8 22 - 4 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The Galactic Center Unique place in our galaxy Seems to contain a massive black hole. Photo at right shows an optical image – the galactic center doesn’t stand out Overlay shows some know optically identified nebulae and the location of the Galactic Center Lec 22: Galaxies 9 Sagittarius region 22 - 5 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The Galactic Center ~0.5° Visible Infrared Optical (left) vs. Near – IR view of the galactic center region. The Galactic Center ~0.5° Baade’s Window Galactic Center M6 NGC 6357 M7 Visible NGC 6334 Infrared Optical (left) vs. Near – IR view of the galactic center region. 22 - 6 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The Galactic Center ~0.5° Baade’s Window Galactic Center M6 NGC 6357 M7 Visible NGC 6334 Infrared Optical (left) vs. Near – IR view of the galactic center region. The Galactic Center 2Mass 22 - 7 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The Galactic Center Spitzer The Galactic Center MSX 22 - 8 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The Galactic Center VLA The Galactic Center VLA 22 - 9 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies Galactic Center Region in the Radio The Galactic Center Region pc Long linear structure tracing Galactic magnetic field 2 pc 0 2 Star forming regions “Molecular ring” of gas rotating about the center. Black hole? 22 - 10 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies The Galactic Center Dense star cluster peaks at the center Infrared false color picture (1.65, 2.2, and 3.5 m. Stellar motion movie at 2.2 m. ~2x106 Msun within 1 pc (Black hole!?) Stars only 1000 AU apart A collision every 106 years! Black hole accretion simulation The center of the Milky Way might look something like this. 22 - 11 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies NGC 1232 -- A galaxy like the Milky Way The stars and gas rotate about the center of the Galaxy. The rotation speed varies with distance from the center. From the speed at a given point, we can deduce the mass! 23 Lec 22: Galaxies Kepler’s Law for the Galaxy The total mass of the galaxy can be computed from Newton’s laws. Like the mass of binary stars. From Lecture 10 (Binary Stars), we have Newton’s version of Kepler’s third law 4 2 r 3 P G M M = total mass P = period r = distance from center 2 Lec 22: Galaxies 24 22 - 12 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies Kepler modified by Newton For a circular orbit v 2 r P v = velocity P = period r = distance from center Combining this with Newton’s version of Kepler’s third law 4 2 3 v2 4 2 r 3 M r G P2 G 4 2 r 2 Lec 22: Galaxies r v2 M (r ) G 25 Example “rotation curves” Rotation curve for merry-go-round (left) and the solar system (right) Lec 22: Galaxies 26 22 - 13 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies Galaxy rotation curve Rotation curve for the Milky Way. Relatively flat Milky Way rotation curve is more like that of a merry-go-round than that of the solar system. Thus there is no dominate central mass Lec 22: Galaxies 27 The Mass of the Galaxy r v2 M (r ) G We use our derived formula For the Sun, v = 220 km/sec at a radius of 8.5 kpc. Orbital period = 240 million years. Mass of MW = 1011 Msun within 8.5 kpc. Going out to 30 kpc (previous slide) MW = 5x1011 Msun Lec 22: Galaxies (v = 270 km/sec) 28 22 - 14 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies Dark Matter The mass seen in stars is much less than that derived from Newton’s laws. There must be some additional mass which is non-luminous! The is unseen mass is call Dark Matter. It is sometimes called missing mass because it isn’t traced by the starlight. Lec 22: Galaxies 29 The star-gas-star cycle The ISM provides the matter from which stars form. Stars evolve and create “heavy” elements These elements are returned to the ISM Stellar nucleosynthesis and supernova Stellar winds, planetary nebula, and supernovae Not all material is returned resulting in the gas being “used up” The “enriched” gas is used by the next generation of stars. Lec 22: Galaxies 30 22 - 15 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies atomic-hydrogen clouds hot bubbles molecular clouds Star-gas-star cycle supernovae and stellar winds star formation stellar-burning/ heavy element formation How did the Milky Way form? The Galaxy collapsed from a cloud of gas and dust from its own self-gravity. Some (Pop II) stars formed first. Remaining gas collapses into a disk angular momentum conservation! First generation massive stars eject metals into the disk so that Pop I stars have higher metallicities Lec 22: Galaxies 32 22 - 16 Lec. 22: Galactic Center and Galaxies Formation of a galaxy system like Milky Way and M31 (Andromeda) x-view z-view Simulation by Rob Thacker 22 - 17