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Astro 6590: Galaxies and the Universe See http://www.astro.cornell.edu/academics/courses/astro6590 • Professors Martha Haynes & Riccardo Giovanelli • MW 1:25-2:40 SSB 301 • 4 credits • Some ability to solve straightforward numerical problems • Background in astronomy helpful, but not required • Books: • “Galactic Astronomy”, Binney & Merrifield • “Galactic Dynamics”, Binney & Tremaine • Papers from the literature available electronically through CU library • Regular assignments will include problems, in class presentations and a final (major) project • All subject to change/negotiation Astro 6590: Galaxies and the Universe See http://www.astro.cornell.edu/academics/courses/astro6590 Find lecture notes by clicking on date Readings/Refs Read the sections in the textbooks; You should read all the papers… at least, someday 1 Astro 6590: Galaxies and the Universe See http://www.astro.cornell.edu/academics/courses/astro6590 Part B: For Your Eyes Only Astro 6590: Galaxies and the Universe See http://www.astro.cornell.edu/academics/courses/astro590 Part B: For Your Eyes Only 2 Constituents of the Milky Way The Milky Way is known in a fair amount of detail, and both the gas and stars split cleanly into different populations or phases. Stars: Disk: 5 x 1010 M Bulge: ~ 1010 M Halo: ~109 M Globulars: ~108 M Gas: Dark matter: H2 clouds: ~109 M Halo: 2 x 1012 M HI gas: 4 x 109 M HII regions: ~108 M Definition: what is a galaxy? • A galaxy is a self-gravitating collection of about 106 to 1011 stars, plus an amount up to 1/2 of as much by mass of gas, and about 10X as much by mass of dark matter. The stars and gas are about 70% hydrogen by mass and 25% helium, the rest being heavier elements (called "metals"). • Typical scales are: masses between 106 to 1012 M (1 solar mass is 2 x 1030 kg), and sizes ~ 1-100 kpc (1 pc = 3.1 x 1016 m). Galaxies that rotate have Prot ~ 10-100 Myr at about 100 km/s. The average separation of galaxies is about 1 Mpc. • Between galaxies there is very diffuse hot gas, called the intergalactic medium (IGM); in clusters this is called the intracluster medium (ICM). It was much denser in the past before galaxies formed, accreted the gas and converted it into stars. 3 Cosmic Inventory Fukugita & Peebles 2004, ApJ 616, 643 73 % - dark energy or cosmological constant 23 % - dark matter, probably CDM Ωbaryons = 0.045+/-0.004 ~ (1/6) Ωmatter Coronal + diffuse IG gas ~0.037 Cluster IGM ~ 0.002 Stars ~ 0.003 Cold Gas ~ 0.0008 (~2/3 atomic) “HI contributes only a piffling fraction of cosmic matter” R. Giovanelli, 2008 Key points about galaxies J.E. Gunn, 1981, “Astrophysical Cosmology” Vatican Symposium 1. Galaxies are easily discernible as discrete entities whereas groups and clusters are not. 2. The specific angular momenta of galaxies correlate closely with optical morphology. • Scaling relations (Fundamental plane/Tully-Fisher relation) 3. The morphological types of galaxies are related to the density of galaxies in their immediate neighborhood. • Morphology-density relation 4. The luminosity function (LF) of galaxies is distinctly nonGaussian with a long tail extending to low luminosities. 5. There are large peaks in the density distribution of matter and these in turn surround the visible portions of galaxies. • Dark matter! 4 Properties of galaxies and clusters of galaxies which must be explained. 1. Galaxies are easily discernible as discrete entities, whereas groups and clusters are not. • Characteristic sizes? • Topologies? • Origin? • On what scale does the cosmological principle hold? If we select a star at random in the universe, it would nearly always be possible to identify its parent galaxy with significant confidence. The same is not true of galaxies and “parent” groups of galaxies. Virial Theorem: -2<K.E.> = <P.E.> Free-fall time: tff = 3π 1 32 Gρ ½ Hierarchical models • How did the structures we see today form and evolve? • Do hierarchical models predict this behavior? • Can they give us any insight into what is going on? timeÆ 5 cluster halo Wechsler et al. ‘Milky Way’ halo Cosmic hierarchies 6 Coma Cluster = A1656 cz ~ 7000 km/s => D ~ 100 Mpc Often used as “prototypical rich cluster” Identifying clusters of galaxies 1 RA = Abell radius ~ 1.5 h-1 Mpc RG et al. 1997 (SCI) 7 The redshift dimension Not only do redshifts help the identification of group or cluster members, they also prove useful to indicate masses, identify substructure and detail evolutionary processes at work e.g. use Virial Theorem to estimate mass of cluster of galaxies 2 Observe many radial velocities: vr P(x,μ,σ) = 1 exp - 1 x – μ 2 σ σ√2π [ ( ) ] Properties of galaxies and clusters of galaxies which must be explained. 2. The specific angular momenta of galaxies correlate closely with optical morphology. • Bare spheroid: ~ 240 kms-1 kpc <= elliptical • Spheroid in disk: ~ 600 “ <= bulge • Disk galaxy: ~4000 a. Elliptical galaxies do not rotate fast enough to explain their flattening. b. Scaling relations: Radii and internal velocities correlate with L Ellipticals Spirals Faber-Jackson relation “Fundamental plane” (later) Tully-Fisher relation L ∝ σ4 log Re = 0.36(<I>e/μB) + 1.4 log σ0 n L∝ L ∝Vrot n~4 γ ~ 2 (~const SB) Rγ , Why? 8 Spiral Galaxies: Tully-Fisher Relation Why? W ~ 2 Vrot Giovanelli et al. 1997 Template Rotation Curves Catinella et al. 2006 ApJ Not just the amplitude, but the shape is correlated with luminosity 9 Morphological Classification Morphological classification schemes 10 Galaxy Zoo Ellipticals: E0 to E7 Type E0 Type E3 Type E6 En, n=0 to 7, where n = 10 (1 – b/a) Hubble 1936, “The Realm of the Nebulae” 11 Spiral sequence To first order, the tightness of a spiral galaxy’s arms is correlated with the size of its nuclear bulge. Type Sa Type Sb Type Sc • In addition: Sa’s are usually brighter, rotate faster and have less current SFR than Sc’s • Sa’s show a diversity of B/D ratios; Sc’s only small ones. The barred spiral sequence • Origin of bars: do all spirals have bars? Why/why not? • Relationship to SMBH Type SBa Type SBb Type SBc 12 Spiral arms • We easily see these spiral arms because they contain numerous bright O and B stars which illuminate dust in the arms. • However, stars in total seem to be evenly distributed throughout the disk. • The density contrast is only of order 10%. The blue image shows young star-forming regions and is affected by dust obscuration. The NIR image shows mainly the old stars and is unaffected by dust. Note how clearly the central bar can be seen in the NIR image. The nearby spiral galaxy M83 in blue light (L) and at 2.2μ (R) Variations in spiral morphology • Spiral structure varies greatly in detail. • The cause of this is not really understood • Grand design spirals seem to have nearby companions – driven by interactions Flocculent spirals (fleecy) Grand-design spirals (highly organized) 13 Properties of galaxies and clusters of galaxies which must be explained. 3. The morphological mix is related to the density of galaxies in the local surroundings. => Morphological segregation Morphology-density relation Dressler, 1980 Holds over 6 orders of magnitude of galaxy density Field: E:S0:Sp = 10:10:80 Why? Hierarchical simulations show a clear correlation between color/morphology and density, in qualitative agreement with observations Kauffmann et al. 1999 VIRGO/GIF simulations see also Benson et al. 2001; Springel et al. 2001 14 Elliptical versus Spiral Ellipticals Smooth light distribution Brightest stars are red Little/no star formation Little/no cool/cold gas Random motions Spirals Arms, disk, bulge Brightest are blue On-going star formation Molecular + atomic gas Circular rotation in disk Found in cluster cores Avoid cluster cores Morphological segregation: Initial conditions or evolution? Lenticulars = S0’s Ellipticals Smooth light distribution Brightest stars are red Little/no star formation Little/no cool/cold gas Random motions Spirals Arms, disk, bulge Brightest are blue On-going star formation Molecular + atomic gas Circular rotation in disk Found in cluster cores Avoid cluster cores S0: Spiral-like: disk+bulge, rotation Elliptical-like: little gas/star formation; no spiral structure Evolution along the Hubble sequence? 15 Properties of galaxies and clusters of galaxies which must be explained. 4. The luminosity function (LF) of galaxies is distinctly nonGaussian with a long tail extending to low luminosities. • LF = The number of objects (stars, galaxies) per unit volume of a given luminosity (or absolute magnitude) Φ(L) = dN/dL dV • Bright galaxies are rare … But can be detected to large distances. • Faint galaxies can only be seen nearby. • Binggeli, Sandage & Tammann: Compared LFs of Virgo Cluster Catalog (VCC) and local field VCC: Virgo Cluster Catalog Sandage, Binggeli & Tammann 1985AJ 90, 1759 Properties of galaxies and clusters of galaxies which must be explained. 4. The luminosity function (LF) of galaxies is distinctly nonGaussian with a long tail extending to low luminosities. LF: Number density of galaxies per unit L φ(L)dL ~ Lα eL/L* dL φ(M)dM ~ 10-0.4(α+1)M exp(-100.4(M*-M)) dL Press-Schechter (1974) formalism plus CDM fluctuation spectrum predicts faint end slope α = -1.8 16 Luminosity function • The L.F. gives the number of galaxies per unit volume per luminosity (or magnitude) interval. • Schechter (1980) expressed the LF as an analytic function with both a power law and an exponential: α = faint end slope L* = luminosity at “knee” of L.F. cD’s too bright! ϕ(L) Bright galaxies are rare. Low L galaxies only seen nearby. log L Elliptical galaxies display a variety of sizes and masses • Giant elliptical galaxies can be 20 times larger than the Milky Way • Dwarf elliptical galaxies are extremely common and can contain as few as a million stars M32 M31 - Andromeda 17 Key points of cosmology (later) The dominant motion in the universe is the smooth linear expansion known as “Hubble’s Law”. • Hubble (1923): galaxy spectra are redshifted • “redshift” = z = ∆ λ / λ • Hubble’s law (1926): v = H d where V is the observed recessional velocity d is the distance in Mpc The metric for a homogeneous and isotropic model universe is: R2(t) dσ2 ds2 = dt2 c2 where R(t) is the scale factor, and dσ2 is the metric for constant curvature in 3-D space: k : the dr2 2 (dθ2 + sin2θ dφ2) dσ2 = + r curvature 1 – kr2 constant 2/3 k=0 => R(t) ∝ t => Einstein-deSitter universe Quantitative Morphology Photometric surface brightness profile (at projected radius R) “de Vaucouleurs’ profile”: I(R)= I(Re) exp{-7.67[(R/Re)¼ - 1]} where Re is the “effective radius” and L(<Re)=½ Ltotal Works for ellipticals and for bulges “exponential profile”: I(R)= I(0) exp[-R/Rd] where Rd is the “exponential scale length”. Works for spiral disks Spiral: I(R) = Ibulge(R) + Idisk(R)… [+ Ibar(R)] 18 Quantitative Morphology “Sersic profile”: I(R)= I(Re) exp{-b[(R/Re)1/n - 1]} where n is the “Sersic index” => n=1 and b=1.67 (disk) n=4 and b=7.67 (deVauc) In general, we want to derive the luminosity density j(r) from the surface brightness I(R): For z2 = r2 - R2 and dz = r dr/(r2 - R2)½: I(R) = ∫ ∞ j(r) dz -∞ = 2 ∞ j(r) r dr R (r2 - R2)1/2 ∫ This is an Abel integral equation with solution: ∞ -1 dI dR j(r) = π R dR (R2 - r2)1/2 ∫ For certain I(R), j(r) can be expressed algebraically. For smooth (fitted) profiles, the integral can be evaluated directly. For noisy data, use the Richardson-Lucy iterative inversion algorithm (B&M 4.2). For Monday’s class I will post the slides tomorrow. Please look at them in advance of class, so I can speed through the first half. 19