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Rotation curves for the Galaxies (Student Activity) "Fame is fleeting. My numbers mean more to me than my name. If astronomers are still using my data years from now, that's my greatest compliment." Vera Rubin Methods We can weigh a spiral galaxy by measuring the gravitational effects of the galaxy's mass on the orbits of objects in its disk. Even beyond the point in the disk at which starlight fades into the blackness of intergalactic space, we can still see radio waves from atomic hydrogen gas. We can therefore use Doppler shifts of the 21-cm emission line of atomic hydrogen to determine how quickly this gas moves toward us or away from us. Galaxies beyond the Local Group have cosmological redshifts affecting all their spectral lines. However, on one side of a spiral galaxy the gas is rotating away from us, so its 21-cm line is redshifted a little more than the redshift of the galaxy as a whole. On the other side, the 21-cm line is blueshifted relative to the redshift of the galaxy as a whole because the gas is rotating toward us. From the Doppler shifts of these clouds, we can construct a rotation curve--a plot showing orbital velocities of gas clouds and stars--just as we did for the Milky Way. A rotation curve contains all the information we need to measure the mass contained within the orbits of the outermost gas clouds. (Because the Doppler effect tells us only about the velocity of material directly toward or away from us, we must also take into account the tilt of the galaxy before we construct the rotation curve.) Measuring the rotation of a spiral galaxy with the 21-cm line of atomic hydrogen. Blueshifted lines on the left side of the disk show how fast that side is rotating toward us. Redshifted lines on the right side show how fast that side is rotating away from us. A rotation curve shows the orbital velocities of stars or gas clouds at different distances from a galaxy's center. 1. Use the data below to plot a rotation curve for the Milky Way Galaxy. r[kpc] r[ly] 2 6520 2.5 8150 3.5 11410 4.5 14670 5.5 17930 6.7 21842 7 22820 7.5 24450 9.5 30970 10.3 33578 11.5 37490 12.5 40750 13.3 43358 14.5 47270 15.5 50530 16.5 53790 17.5 57050 18.5 60310 What are the differences between this rotation curve and the those of the solar system? 2. Other data for other Galaxies can be found below. The data is taken from Vera's Rubin's Work (The Astrophysical Journal 238, 471-487), 1980. NGC 801 r (kpc) r(ly) v(km/s) 9 29340 212 10 32600 218 12 39120 222 14 45640 218 16 52160 218 18 58680 225 20 65200 228 22 71720 225 24 78240 221 26 84760 216 28 91280 212 32 104320 207 36 117360 205 40 130400 202 NGC 2998 r (kpc) r(ly) v(km/s) 10 32600 189 12 39120 200 14 45640 203 16 52160 206 18 58680 209 20 65200 211 22 71720 213 26 84760 214 30 97800 215 34 110840 216 3. Astronomers have studied galaxy UGC 128 for many years. They have measured its brightness and calculated that the mass of stars within a radius of 1.30 x 1021 m is 3.34 x 1040 kg. Stars orbiting at this radius has been measured travelling at a speed of 1.30 x 105 m/s. What percentage of the mass within this radius is dark matter? (From Perimeter Institute DVD). 4. Our sun is located in the Milky Way galaxy which is shown in the figure below. Its distance from the galaxy center is 8kpc (1 parsec is equal to 3.26 light year) and its orbital velocity around the galaxy center is 220 km/s. Use your former answer to calculate the Calculate the mass of the Milky Way Galaxy within the solar circle.