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2a. The Interstellar Medium 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Dust in galaxies • Definitions of opacity, optical depth, colour excess • MW extinction law (and LMC,SMC) • Chemical composition 2.3 Overall Galactic extinction • Mapping the dust distribution • Extinction in other galaxies 2b. The Interstellar Medium 2.4 Observations of dust clouds • Dark clouds (& Bok globules, EGGs) • Reflection nebulae 2.5 Interstellar gas • Atomic hydrogen (Lya, HI, local bubble) • Molecular gas • HII regions • Coronal gas • Stellar remnants - Planetary nebulae, Supernova remnants • Cosmic rays 2. The Interstellar Medium Sources: KKOPD 4.5, 15 (whole chapter); CO 12.1 (very brief); a lecture on dust by Keel; further reading BM 3.7 2.1 Introduction: The Galaxy (and other galaxies) consist of stars, dust and gas (and DM) stars – studied in detail in previous semester interstellar medium (dust and gas) in this section Why? The history review of history of determining shape and size of galaxies have shown the importance of dust absorption and scattering, and Rayleigh scattering in the determination of the true size of the Galaxy • distances to object in the Galaxy • mapping distances to other galaxies • determination of the total light, hence luminous matter • apart from being the ingredient in the formation of stars Interstellar gas is filthy: compressed to density of ordinary air (factor of 1021) density of smoke would be such that objects would disappear in haze at distance of much less than 1m!!! The effects of absorbing material in galaxies were recognized before the physical nature of galaxies became clear. A study by H.D. Curtis published in 1918 compared photographs of spirals in an obvious inclination sequence, showing that a band of obscuring material lies in the disk plane It became clear, especially from comparing with nearby edge-on systems such as NGC 891, that this layer is exactly what we see in our view of the Milky Way Lund panorama of MW (blue light) NGC 891 (red light) Effects of Dust Important effects caused by scattering or absorption Dimming: scattering (redirection of light out of line of sight) absorption (photons transformed to heat) Reddening: as light travels through interstellar dust cloud bluer photons get scattered more strongly than red ones Heating: absorption is an important source of energy for the ISM: blue light heats dust re-emits in IR many galaxies emit large fractions of their light in the IR Dust has been observed in two guises: optical/UV absorption & far-IR emission With the recent advance in NIR and FIR astronomy, a lot is being learned about dust and grain properties, but also in mm-observations (molecules, especially CO) Observations of the ISM • Optical imaging and spectroscopy • Absorption of star light (dimming) and reddening e.g. Dark clouds, patches in galaxies (horsehead nebulae, Coalsack) • Scattered light e.g. Reflection Nebulae from gas around stars • Line emission from ionized gas (warm gas) e.g. regions around hot young stars (HII regions), Planetary nebulae, SN remnants Observations of the ISM – cont. • NIR and FIR observations of heated dust (e.g. IRAS, Spitzer, Herschel, WISE) • Radio, submm and mm • Cold gas • neutral gas (21cm transition of HI) • molecular gas (CO transition at 2.6mm), also masers in star forming region in radio (H2O) • From polarization - magnetic fields (information about grains) • X-ray: Hot gas (interstellar and intergalactic) Phenomena caused by the interstellar medium (Table 15.2 in KKOPD) Some recent highlights Left: M31 in CO (cold molecular gas) obtained with 800 hours of observation at the 30m IRAM mm telescope at the 2.6mm transition line (Astron. Astrophys. July 2006) Right: optical image for comparison ? M31 as seen with Spitzer, the mid-infrared (3.5 – 8 μm) Space Telescope launched 08/03) Two highly obscured (AB = 22 mag) spiral galaxies discovered in GLIMPSE (the mid-infrared Legacy Survey) obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope At l = 317.04 b = -0.50 l = 316,87 b = -0.60 At the heart of the GA? 2.2 Back to Dust in Galaxies •Dust is important in star-formation& induced SF through interacting and merging galaxies •Dust is being condensed in stars’ atmospheres and expelled by stellar winds •Dust is a useful first proxy for phases of the interstellar medium that are harder to trace, since cool gas and dust are coupled gravitationally through the drag of atom/grain collisions NGC 3314 - Hubble Heritage image AM1316-241 Definitions on extinction and optical thickness (m – M) = 5 log r – 5 Recall: distance modulus: (with r in pc) as distance r increases brightness decreases as 1/r2 apparent magnitude increases Except: absorbing (and/or light scattering) medium along the light path EXTINCTION How does extinction depend on distance? -Take source emitting light Lo into solid angle ω - in the distance interval [r , r + dr], the extinction dL is proportional - to flux L, - the distance travelled in the medium - and the absorbing material through the opacity (Note: has dimension 1 / m) For : zero transparent infinity completely opaque Definition of optical thickness (dimensionless) dL = -a L dr dt = a dr ® dL = - L dt Integrating from source (L = L0, and τ= 0) Definitions of extinction and optical thickness Optical thickness is the depth of a medium in which the intensity of light of a given frequency is reduced to a factor of 1/e - roughly 2/3 of the light is absorbed within one optical thickness depth L falls of exponentially with increasing optical thickness: Note: empty space is transparent thus = 0 τ does not increase L remains const. With a flux density F0 of the star at its surface R and F(r) the flux density at a distance r, we get: R 2 -t F(r) = F0 2 e r relating this to absolute magnitudes (thus for r =10 pc), we can determine the dist. modulus m - M = -2.5 log F (r ) = 5 log r - 5 - 2.5 log e - t = 5 log r - 5 + (2.5 log e)t F (10 pc ) or m - M = 5 log r - 5 + A where A is the extinction in magnitudes For A ≥ 0 is the total extinction in magnitudes due to the entire medium between the star and observer. For constant opacity: r t = a ò dr = ar ® A = ar with a = 2.5a log e ...ext. in mag. per unit distance 0 a = 1.086 The change in magnitude due to extinction is approximately equal to the optical depth along the line of sight (since A ≈ r = τ) Summary of definitions opacity [m-1]; characterizes absorbing medium (through reduction of light) dL = -a dr L For : zero transparent; infinity completely opaque optical thickness (dimensionless) dt = a dr ® dL = - dt ® L = L0e - t L depth of a medium in which the intensity of radiation of a given frequency is reduced by a factor of 1 / e; 2/3 of the light is being absorbed within one optical depth; ) L decreases exponentially - with increasing α (thickness of absorbing material Using flux ratios and the distance modulus we got a value of the total extinction A in magnitudes due to the entire medium between the star and observer m - M = 5 log r - 5 + A with A = 2.5(log e)t r For constant opacity: t = a ò dr = ar ® A = 2.5(log e)ar = 1.086ar 0 For a unit distance the extinction in magnitude A = 1.086 The change in magnitude due to extinction is approximately equal to the optical depth dτ along the line of sight Atmospheric Extinction (see lecture notes of first semester) The Earth’s atmosphere also causes extinction: The observed magnitude m depends on the location of the observer and the zenith distance of the object - determines the distance light has to travel through the atmosphere. - to compare different observations: compare the different pathes light has taken to reach you (your telescope and detector) - assume atmospheric layer of const. thickness X = 1 / cos z = sec z Where X is the airmass. The magnitude increases (gets fainter) linearly with distance X m = m0 + kX Where k is the extinction coefficient The extinction coefficient can be determined by observing the same (standard) source several time during the night with a wide variety in zenith distances – usually well known for established Observatories. First dust extinction measurements by Trumpler Trumpler 1930: first clear evidence of the existence of dust through the study of the space distribution of open star clusters: - absolute magnitudes of brightest stars: from spectra type distance r could be calculated from apparent magnitude via the distance modulus (m-M) or fitting of MS stars - he also determined the linear diameter D from the apparent angular diameter (D = d r) - more distant cluster appeared to be systematically larger than nearer ones Space is not completely transparent: star light is dimmed by some intervening material m - M = 5 log r - 5 + A Trumpler obtained in the Galactic plane: apg = 0.70 mag/kpc (recall A = a r) Today: apg = 2mag/kpc thus 10mag extinction over a path of 5 kpc!!! Colour Excess - but first: Recap: Photometry, magnitudes, filters -mv :visual magnitude (sensitive as in human eye, yellow at 5500Å) -mpg : photographic magnitude, more towards the blue -mbol : bolometric magnitude, integrated over all -BC : bolometric correction (BC = mbol - m or Mbol - M), [original: visual, to F5 ] Colour Excess Another effect caused by the interstellar medium is reddening: blue light is scattered and absorbed more then red: the observed colour index (B-V) increases. E.g. the observed visual and blue magnitude of a star are: V = MV + 5 log r - 5 + AV and B = M B + 5 log r - 5 + AB The observed colour index (same for apparent and intrinsic magnitudes) is: and ( B - V ) = ( M B - M V ) + ( AB - AV ) ... or ( B - V ) = ( B - V )0 + E( B - V ) ... where ( B - V )0 = M B - M V … is the intrinsic color of a star E(B - V) = (B - V) - (B - V)0 … is the colour excess Studies of the interstellar medium show that the colour excess E(B-V) is practically constant for stars: AV R= » 3.0 E(B - V ) This makes it possible to determine the visual extinction if the colour excess is known Colour Excess (B -V ) = (B -V )0 + E(B -V ) (B -V )0 = M B - MV and E(B - V) = (B - V) - (B - V)0 where …is the intrinsic color of a star … is the colour excess Observed colour Colour excess Measure magnitudes of stars of same spectral type in different filters to get wavelength dependence A(l ) µ1/ l Longer λ Extinction as a function of 1/ λ for wavelengths longer than B-band Colour Excess (B -V ) = (B -V )0 + E(B -V ) (B -V )0 = M B - MV and E(B - V) = (B - V) - (B - V)0 where …is the intrinsic color of a star … is the colour excess 2175Å bump A(l ) µ1/ l Longer λ Extinction as a function of 1/ λ Milky Way Extinction curve Colour Excess • Ratio of colour excess E(B-V) and Av is ~ constant for stars AV R= » 3.0 E(B - V ) • R does not depend on properties of star or amount of dust • Useful for getting distances from photometry alone • Know intrinsic colour for particular spectral type • Measure observed colour AV » 3.0EB-V V - MV = 5logr - 5+ AV • A(λ) 0 for very large λ (e.g. radio) • Measure to optical/NIR to ~ 2μm from earth • Shorter wavelengths (UV) from space • Interstellar extinction largest at shortest wavelengths • ~10% of optical in IR • Negligible in radio Optically obscured objects can therefore be studied in the IR and in the radio. Extinction curve to shorter wavelengths for MW, LMC, SMC Extinction •Reminder: Extinction caused by both scattering and absorption • Absorption: radiant energy transformed into heat, re-radiated at IR wavelengths corresponding to temperatures of dust particles reduced intensity and reddening of colour • Scattering: the direction of light changed as f(λ), leading to reduced intensity in the original direction of propagation (and change in colour) •Extinction caused by dust grains with D near wavelength of light •Gas can cause extinction but much lower scattering efficiency scattering by total amount of gas negligible in interstellar space (contrary to air molecules in Earth’s atmosphere atmospheric extinction) Scattering Assume that size a, refraction index m and number density n of particles is known •all particles are spheres with radius a geometrical cross section is π a² the true extinction cross section of particles: Cext = Qext p a 2 where Qext is the extinction efficiency factor (or extinction coefficient) •Q is dimensionless •Q depends on composition of dust grains and wavelength • consider volume element dV with length dl and cross section dA normal to the direction of light propagation with particle density n • assume that particles don’t overshadow each other then there are in the volume element dV n dl dA particles Scattering cont. n dl dA particles Cross section They will cover the fraction dt of the area dA : Cext n dA dl Cext dt = = nCext dl dA The intensity within the path dl will then be reduced, proportional to fraction covered: dL = -Ldt with dt the optical depth ® total optical depth observer - star: r r 0 0 t (r) = ò d t = ò nCext dl = Cext nr Where n is the ‘average’ particle density along the path. In magnitudes: A = (2.5 log e)t = 1.086t ® A(r ) = (2.5 log e)Cext n r = 1.086Cext n r Note: can be used to determine mean dust density if the other quantities are known (extinction and distance) Scattering cont. For spherical particles with radius a and refractive index m, the extinction efficiency factor Qext can be calculated exactly. In general: Define Qext = Qabs + Qsca x = 2pa / l (Absorbing and scattering efficiency factors) with λ the wavelength of radiation, then Qext = Qext ( x, m) The exact expression is a series expansion in x that converges more slowly for larger values x. •For x«1 (particles much smaller than λ): Rayleigh scattering •Else particles similar or larger than λ: Mie scattering Qext ~ const. Cext µ a 2 Since Cext = Qext p a 2 Qext µ a / l Cext µ a 3 / l Analogy: waves on the surface of a lake - If waves much smaller than an obstructing object (an island), they are simply blocked - If waves are much larger than object in their way (grain of sand), the waves pass by almost completely unaffected (Qλ ~ 0) Scattering cont. Example: Extinction efficiency factor for refraction index m=1.5 and m=1.33 (water) for increasing particle size wrt wavelength For large x (x»1): Qext ≈ 2 Cross section is not just geometrical crosssection (Q = 1) as expected, because of diffraction of light at edges of particle • Extinction has wavelength dependence because cross-section for scattering depends on λ • Red light scattered less than blue light • Causes stars to look redder than effective temp. suggests Chemical composition of dust grains The UV bump at 2175Å = 4.6μm-1 •Predictions for A from Mie theory work well for longer wavelengths (IR to visible) Cext µ a3 / l gives A =1.086Cext nr µ1/ l •but strong deviations in the UV around 2175Å - sharp rise as wavelength decreases The bump gives hint about composition of dust: Graphite: well-ordered form of carbon, interacts strongly with light at 2175Å •Unclear how big graphite particles can get in ISM, but abundance of carbon and the resonance around 2175Å suggests graphite is a major component of ISM NIR observations (ISO) •Observations of dark absorption bands at 9.7 and 18 μm •from stretching of silicates in SiO and Si-O-Si bonds (energy levels tend to be grouped in closely spaced bands – broad features in the spectrum) Existence of Silicate grains in dust clouds and diffuse ISM NIR emission Observations of unidentified infrared emission bands between 3 and 12μm Due to vibrations in C-C and C-H bond (planar molecules with organic benzene ring-like structures) known as Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) Polarization Light from interstellar dust tends to be slightly polarized; typically a few percent (amount depends on wavelength) Dust particles can not be spherical but must be elongated Dust particles must be somewhat aligned Suggests existence of a (weak) magnetic field (difficult to measure as Earth and Solar B much stronger) By studying the direction of polarization in various directions one can map the direction of the Galactic magnetic field (see next sheet) The dust in the ISM seems composed of both graphic and silicate grains ranging from 0.25 μm to several Angstroms, the size of PAHs But note: the dominant component of the ISM is gas: HI, HII, H2 Between 1-1.5kpc Magnetic field of MW More distant stars: B is aligned with Gal. Plane between 100-200pc Nearer stars: Plumes of B rise tens of parsec above the Gal. Plane From Zeeman splitting of Doppler shifted 21 cm lines B ~ 10-10 – 10-9T (about 1 millionth of interplanetary field in solar system) NIR emission Observations of unidentified infrared emission bands between 3 and 12μm Due to vibrations in C-C and C-H bond (planar molecules with organic benzene ring-like structures) known as Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) Polarization Light from interstellar dust tends to be slightly polarized; typically a few percent (amount depends on wavelength) Dust particles can not be spherical but must be elongated Dust particles must be somewhat aligned Suggests existence of a (weak) magnetic field (difficult to measure as Earth and Solar B much stronger) By studying the direction of polarization in various directions one can map the direction of the Galactic magnetic field (see next sheet) The dust in the ISM seems composed of both graphic and silicate grains ranging from 0.25 μm to several Angstroms, the size of PAHs But note: the dominant component of the ISM is gas: HI, HII, H2 The Milky Way’s ISM 30 Doradus – Tarantula Nebula in LMC (HST image) •Extinction curves for Milky Way, LMC, 30 Doradus and SMC •Increased extinction to shorter wavelengths •interrupted by local maximum - the so-called 2175-Angstrom bump The interstellar medium (ISM) of the Milky Way - About 10% of the mass of the MW consists of interstellar gas - Interstellar space contains about 1 gas atom / cm3 - about 0.1% of that in dust grains (gas and dust distribution are strongly linked) - It is strongly concentrated towards the plane of the MW - What (little) we know about its grain properties comes from - the analysis of the extinction curve - the normalized amount of extinction as a function of wavelength, - derived from looking at pairs of stellar spectra with similar temperatures but different foreground extinctions. - The general extinction curve within each of the Milky Way, LMC, and SMC is fairly well defined - The overall increase to shorter wavelengths (approximately with absorption in magnitudes inversely proportional to wavelength) is interrupted by a local maximum - The so-called 2200-Angstrom bump Main properties of interstellar gas and dust • Dust grains form in the atmospheres of stars of late spectral type (lower mass) and then expelled by radiation pressure into space. • Also form during star formation & possibly directly from atoms and molecules in IS clouds 2.3 Overall Galactic Dust Extinction (from galaxy counts to gas distribution to the DIRBE/COBE dust maps) • Images of edge-on galaxies & MW show that dust is concentrated in a fairly thin disk (~100pc for MW) • very high optical depth as viewed through the plane • IR observers quote values of AV=40 magnitudes toward the galactic center • Disk not very optically thick in the vertical direction (ZOA is relatively narrow) • Dust distribution is patchy: some areas at high & moderate galactic latitudes where we can see out (Baade’s window at (ℓ,b) = (1º, -3.9º) with 1.26 < AV < 2.79; Stanek 1996) • What is the radial and scale-height distribution of dust? • How does it relate to the spiral structure? • How does it affect the light from a galaxy's own stars and from background sources? Edge-on spiral NGC 891 (again) in the red Recall: the sun is located near the central plane of the galactic dust layer Dust in direction of GP is very large (higher towards GB than Gal. Anticentre) Dust towards Galactic poles is low (0.1mag) This is apparent in the distribution of galaxies A band of about 20º width where hardly any galaxies are ZONE OF AVOIDANCE The Effects of dust and stars in the Galaxy on external galaxies → smaller and fainter Part of Takahiro Nagayama’s PhD thesis 2004 (Nagoya University) (1) Assume ‘homogenous’ dust layer that will give rise to a total extinction Δm magnitudes in vertical direction. Then the total Galactic extinction at Galactic latitude b will be: AV (b) = Dm(b) = Dm / sin b = Dm csc b A galaxy with the apparent magnitude m0 will be dimmer by that amount (2) Assume uniform distribution of galaxies in space. The number count per unit solid angle to apparent magnitude m will increase as: However, accounting for the Galactic foreground extinction, the observable number of galaxies will be reduced: log N (m, b) = log N 0 [m - Dm(b)]= 0.6[m - Dm(b)]+ C = log N 0 (m) - 0.6Dm(b) = C '-0.6Dm / sin b = C '-0.6 AV Where C ' = log N 0 (m) does ‘NOT’ depend on Galactic latitude. So by counting galaxies at various latitudes b the extinction can be determined. Lick counts: Δmpg = 0.51mag, Determination in the blue by Sandage (1973): AB = 0.132(csc b - 1) for b £ 50° =0 for b > 50° Relation of dust with interstellar gas (valid for AV < 1 mag): •E(B – V) is proportional to column density NHI of interstellar hydrogen atom (HI or H2) N HI E(B - V) = •Bohlin et al. 1978; Kent et al. 1991: 5.8 ´10 25 m-2 E(B - V ) Indicating constant dust to gas ratio : = const. N HI Constancy down different lines of sight fixed number and size of dust grains associated with given mass of hydrogen - obviously only true as a first approximation Near the Sun the number density is: n HI =106 m-3 Along line of sight of length (distance) d in kpc (1 kpc = 3.086 x 1019 m): d -2 d m Þ E(B -V ) = 0.53 kpc kpc Þ AV =1.6mag/kpc N HI = 3.1´10 25 DUST MAPS Burstein & Heiles 1982 - most of the sky lying outside the ZOA (|b| < 10º) Method: Count of number of galaxies in any zone to some limited magnitude; Problem: cluster of galaxies compensate for extinction. Extinction linked to neutral hydrogen from 21 cm column density Problem: ionized and molecular gas cannot be detected. Combining two methods accuracy of 0.01 in E(B-V) or 10% HI column density map Hartmann et al. 1997; grid of 0.5º, supplemented with the lower resolution southern sky map constructed by Dickey & Lockman (1990). Log scale from 1019 to 2 1022 cm-2 Even newer HI data at: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/hisurvey/profile) HI column density map Parkes Galactic All Sky Survey (GASS) mapped entire Southern sky visible from Australia (south of dec = 1 degree), 16 arcmin resolution Log scale from 1019 to 2 1022 cm-2 Even newer HI data from GASS at: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/hisurvey/profile HI column density map Parkes Galactic All Sky Survey (GASS) mapped entire Southern sky visible from Australia (south of dec = 1 degree), 16 arcmin resolution LSR -400 km/s and 500 km/s. Log scale from 1019 to 2 1022 cm-2 McClure-Griffiths et al. 2009 https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/07/160725151144.htm Hodges-Kluck, Miller, Bregman. THE ROTATION OF THE HOT GAS AROUND THE MILKY WAY. The Astrophysical Journal, 2016; 822 (1): 21 DOI: 10.3847/0004-637X/822/1/21 DIRBE Dust map http://irsa.ipac.caltech.edu/applications/DUST/ NASA Extragalactic Database coordinate and extinction calculator Dust emission measured by COBE/DIRBE and IRAS/ISSA in the infrared Schlegel, Finkbeiner & Davis 1998 (Schlafly&Finkbein er update 2011) More direct than Burnstein & Heiles (1982) The distribution of cataloged galaxies with D ≥ 1.3’ (The diameter limit for which this Aitoff projection is complete) Comparison with DIRBE dust extinction maps: hardly any galaxies for AB = 1mag º UGC in the north of δ ≥ -17.5° (Nilson 1973); ESO Uppsala south of δ ≤ -17.5°; MCG inbetween (VV &A 1963-197 Extinction in other galaxies (Galactic or internal extinction Ai) Classical test for effects of dust traces back at least to Holmberg's 1958 paper - using the surface-brightness versus inclination test - For transparent galaxies surface brightness should vary with apparent axial ratio a/b (same light concentrated in a smaller area) - For opaque galaxies we see only a thin skin (outer layer closest to us) - the mean surface brightness will be constant with inclination. Note: also affects isophotal diameters Holmberg came to the reassuring conclusion that dust effects for global light were minor Extinction in other galaxies Can be described by the following law: for a/b < 4.7 Where a and b are the major and minor axis. The maximum is invoked so that highly inclined galaxies do not get over-corrections. The slope depends on galaxy type later spirals having more dust) and strongly on the waveband (absorption diminishes with increasing λ) Typical values for the blue magnitudes (B) are (Sandage & Tammann 1981): BUT observationally, Valentijn (1990 Nature 346, 153) analyzed surface photometry of the entire ESO/Uppsala galaxy survey to conclude that galaxies are almost optically thick, out through the optical disk. More modern result of the study of extinction in a sample of Sc galaxies Giovanelli, Haynes et al. 1994 Note: Disks have an intrinsic thickness and the relation between inclination i and axis ratio a/b cos i = b/a relation does break down: i = cos-1 [((b/a)²-q0²)/(1-q0²)]1/2 with q0 ~0.2 (intrinsic thickness of disk) Aside on the inclination of spirals • Holmberg (1958) assumed that disk galaxies can be represented as oblate spheroids with (b / a)2 - q02 cos i = 1- q02 2 where i is the inclination, (b/a) is the observed axial ratio, and q0 is the axial ratio for an edge-on system (c/a, for c the disk thickness) • q0 can be a function of morphological type • This assumes that galaxies have circular isophotes (clearly not always e.g. M101) • Less obvious cases increase uncertainty in i, particularly at low i, but variations in q0 may be equally important Important not "just" for understanding how galaxies work, but for • the distance scale (inclination corrections to magnitudes in Tully-Fisher) • understanding dark matter (if we're seeing only half the starlight, that increases the relative amount of dark matter) • the evolution of QSOs (when does the cumulative absorption along a random line of sight become so large that QSOs will disappear from optical surveys?) Cardiff workshop: The Opacity of Galaxy Disks (1990) • improved statistical analyses of various surface photometry samples • models of radiative transfer in clumpy media • studies of overlapping galaxies • new measurements of far-infrared and sub-millimeter dust emission overall agreement: disks centrally quite optically thick, falling to transparent at the edges, with dusty spiral arms and considerable variation among galaxies. Look at huge Sandage and Bedke 1988 Book: Atlas of Galaxies You will see galaxies behind the disks of nearby spiral galaxies 2.4. Direct Observations of Dust Clouds (a) Dark clouds Recall: dust is seen in spiral arms (in particular in the inner edge) but we also have individual dust clouds (dark patches) - often close to young star clusters!! Coalsack (Schirmer) Horse-head nebula in Orion (a) Dark clouds Usefulness (apart from being pretty ): • of huge interest for star formation and determination of progenitor material of new stars • Determination total dust content (total extinction) in cloud from star counts within certain magnitude interval in and adjacent to a dark cloud Wolf diagram: Comparison region: star counts increase monotonically In or on dark cloud: increase to certain level, leveling off, the renewed increase with expected slope of log N Δm is extinction due to dark cloud (2 mag in figure) Stars up to that level are in front of dark cloud Star after plateau are behind cloud Can be useful for distance estimates to DC Dark globules (or Bok globules) e.g. The Eagle Nebula (M16) optical "Pillars of Creation“: gas & dust sculpted and lit up by bright, powerful high-mass stars in the NGC 6611 young stellar cluster Sometimes see against bright nebulae – new SF Properties of Bok globules: - high extinction AV ~ 10 mag - low temp.: T ~ 10 K - high density: n > 104 cm-3 - low masses: M ~ 1 – 1000 Msun - small sizes: r ~ 1pc Wide-field IR image (144) of the Messier 16 region excellent spatial resolution (ISAAC instrument, VLT 8.2-m) penetrates the obscuring dust light from newly born stars. 2 of 3 pillars have very young, relatively massive stars in their tips. Another dozen or so lower-mass stars associated with the small "evaporating gaseous globules” (EGGs) scattered over the surface of pillars. HST Dark globules (or Bok globules) e.g. The Eagle Nebula (M16) optical "Pillars of Creation“: gas & dust sculpted and lit up by bright, powerful high-mass stars in the NGC 6611 young stellar cluster Sometimes see against bright nebulae – new SF Properties of Bok globules: - high extinction AV ~ 10 mag - low temp.: T ~ 10 K - high density: n > 104 cm-3 - low masses: M ~ 1 – 1000 Msun - small sizes: r ~ 1pc •Site of formation for binaries & multiple star systems •Mostly H2, carbon oxides, Helium, ~1% silicate dusts •EGGs – dense gas clouds, shelter from ionizing flux HST Reflection Nebulae (about 500 known) Note: Reflection nebulae & emission nebulae often seen together - sometimes both referred to as diffuse nebulae - clouds of dust which reflect the light of a nearby star or stars. The nearby star or stars are not hot enough to cause ionization in the gas of the nebula like in emission nebulae but bright enough to give sufficient scattering to make the dust visible. The Witch Head (IC2118) at d~1000 ly, associated with the bright star Rigel in the constellation Orion (top right – not visible on image) •Glows primarily by light reflected from Rigel. •Fine dust in the nebula reflects the light. •Blue because Rigel is blue color and dust grains reflect blue light more efficiently than red. Reflection Nebulae (about 500 known) •spectrum of RN is similar to that of the illuminating stars (scattered light) •Dust grains are carbon compounds (e.g. diamond dust) and compounds of e.g. Fe, Ni •Often polarization observed (due to dust alignment – stars hardly ever have polarized light) •Usually blue because the scattering is more efficient for blue light than red The Witch Head (IC2118) at d~1000 ly, associated with the bright star Rigel in the constellation Orion (top right – not visible on image) NGC 2264: the Christmas Tree Cluster taken at the NSF's 0.9-meter telescope on Kitt Peak with the NOAO Mosaic CCD camera Open cluster of stars embedded in a diffuse nebula. Cone nebula: bottom centre Fox Fur nebula: upper left Image created by combining H (red-orange), oxygen [OIII] in light-blue and sulfur [SII] in blue violet Press release December 2005 “Spitzer Unveils Infant Stars in the Christmas Tree Cluster:” Spitzer spots a stellar snowflake on the "Christmas Tree Cluster." The infant stars appear as pink and red specks in the snowflake-shaped cluster at the center of the image. Astronomers combined light from Spitzer's IRAC and MIPS cameras in this mosaic. (Photo: NASA/JPL/SSC) Quote: …. a spectacular new picture of a star-forming region called the "Christmas Tree Cluster,“ complete with the first-ever views of a group of newborn stars still linked to their siblings …. In 1922, E. Hubble found 2 interesting relationships: Spec. types: OBAFGKM (1) - emission nebulae (EN) only occur near stars with sp. type earlier than B0 - reflection nebulae (RN) may be found near stars w. sp. Type B1 and later (2) Relationship between angular size R of nebulae and the apparent magnitude m of the illuminating star 5 log R = -m + c the angular diameter is larger for brighter stars (the const. takes account of the fact that the longer an exposure the brighter the larger the nebulae will appear) Figure by vd Bergh 1966 based on measurement on POSS: - Points correspond to RN - Line is regression with slope 12.0 Theoretical derivation of this relation by assuming: -illumination of dust cloud is inversely proportional to d² of illuminating star - Dust clouds are uniformly distributed in space The theoretical derivation predicts a value of the const. c in terms of albedo (ratio of scattered to incident light) and phase function of grains Albedo quite high (not well determined as distance between star and RN not well known) Note: even if DC not visible (anymore) as RN, it will reflect light (certainly if albedo is high) visible as diffuse Galactic light (indeed observed) - 20-30% of total brightness of MW 2.5 Interstellar Gas Discovery and Composition Mass of gas is > 100 times larger than dust, but much less easily observed (does not cause extinction). Existence surmised early 20th century -1904 Hartmann: noted abs. lines in binary systems that are not Doppler-shifted by star motions in accordance to motions of stars and other observed lines: From interstellar gas clouds (various at various Doppler shifts) between star and observer In the optical Most common lines are neutral sodium Na (D1 and D2 at 5898.8 and 5890.0 Angstrom) e.g. in star spectrum of HD14134: -Two pairs of D1 and D2 lines, corresponding to gas clouds in 2 different spiral arms with Δv = 30 km/s … and singly ionized calcium, the H and K lines (Ca II H 3938.7 and Ca II K 3968.5 Angstrom) More lines exist in UV, but the most common and strongest there is 1216 Angstrom (Ly) we now use Ly to trace inter’galactic’ gas clouds in the high redshift universe in the optical domain at z > 3 Many of the atoms are found to be ionized – due to UV emission of stars, and fact that ISM is not very dense; hardly any electron around for recombination Note: - Mostly elements up to Zn (a few heavier elements have been detected) As in stars most of the mass is in H (70%) and He(30%) But heavier elements are less abundant!! The probably reside in the dust grains (hence not produce absorption lines) (a) Atomic Hydrogen (a) Lyman studies of ISM: Ly : transition from ground state (n=1) to 1st excitation state (n=2) - 1216Å. Excellent probe of ISM: the ISM is cool; most HI atoms are in ground state (n=1) and can be excited to n=2. Note: contrarily to stars, which are hot, thus most H in excited state n=2; resulting for T= 10’000K, in strong Balmer line absorption series But Ly observations need to be made from space!! First observations with rocket in 1967. Example: spectrum of ζOph, strongest lines is Ly absorption (Morton 1975) Copernicus satellite Complementary to 21cm line observations, because of the difficulty of determining distances to nearby hydrogen clouds, while for Ly the distance to the star is often known. Some results from Ly : •The average gas density within 1 kpc: 0.7 atoms/cm3 •But between Sun and Arcturus (11pc) it is: Sun is in a low density bubble of ISM: The so-called “Local Bubble”!! 0.02 – 0.1 atoms/cm3 Interlude: The Local Bubble Results from the Extreme UV Explorer EUVE (1992 – 2000) – updating some very early results from 1975 during a historic link-up of Apollo (USA) and Soyuz (USSR) observations of very near stars showed underdense hot region interstellar ‘gas’ is not uniformly distributed but unevenly, with cool dense clumps interspersed with hot low-density gas shaped like ‘bubbles’ and ‘tunnels’ The Sun seems to reside (travel through) in such a low density bubble; “Local Bubble” -A peanut-shaped cavity - of low-density hot thin gas: ~ 0.001 atoms/cm3 with T ~ 1- 2 106 K (so 100 less dense than normal ISM and 1000 - 100’000 times hotter) - Contains about 200’000 stars - Extent - ~ 100 – 200 pc - Probably caused by multiple SN explosions that occurred several 100’000 yrs ago NASA launched a satellite in January 2003 - the Cosmic Hot Interstellar Plasma Spectrometer, or "CHIPS" - to study the Local Bubble. Similar features observed in other galaxies: “Holes and Shells in the ISM of the nearby dwarf galaxy IC2574”, Walter & Brinks, 1999, AJ Optical image: H I holes in IC 2574. The gray-scale map is a linear representation of the H I surface-brightness map. (b) The Hydrogen 21cm line The 21 cm line is produced by the reversal of the spin of the electron relative to proton in nucleus (corresponding to 2 allowed values of the quantum number ms = ±½) in the hyperfine forbidden spin-flip transition (can be in absorption too) Photon emitted from higher energy level (parallel spins): λ = 21.049cm ν = 1420.4MHz It has extreme low probability: spontaneous de-excitation only every 3.5 1014s or 1.1 107yrs - In the ISM collisions are more probable. - They occur on timescales of 100’s of years (can result in excitation and/or de-excitation) - Still there is enough HI that this transition does occur (typical number density of HI atoms along line of sight N(HI) ~ 1021 cm-2)) All HI emission comes from outer space: best vacuums produced on Earth have such ‘high’ densities that collisions dominate and spontaneous 21 cm emission never occurs …. 21cm line emission predicted theoretically by H. van der Hulst 1944 first detection observationally in 1951 by Ewen and Purcell Important tool in mapping the location and density of HI, measuring velocities (Doppler) and estimating magnetic field (Zeeman) Although HI is quite abundant, the rarity of 21 cm emission (or absorption) means that the line remains optically thin of large interstellar distances Assuming that the line profile is Gaussian, the optical depth of the line center is given by t H = 5.2 ´10 -19 Where NH TDv - NH is the column density of HI (in units of atoms cm-2) - T is the temperature of gas (in K) - Δv is the full width of the line at half maximum (in km/s) Since the line width is primarily due to Doppler (due to gas motions within the cloud or of the cloud as a whole) Δv is usually expressed in km/s As long as the line is optically thin, the optical depth is proportional to the neutral HI column density Studies of diffuse HI clouds indicate temperatures of 30-80K densities of 100 - 800 cm-3 masses of 1 – 100 Msun Comparing the optical depth of HI and dust along the same LOS shows that N H µ N d when AV < 1 Indicating (as mentioned before) that dust and gas are distributed in the same way – except for AV > 1, where this relation breaks down Studies of the 21cm line have revealed more about the properties of the ISM than any other method. A lot has been learned about the spiral structure and rotation of the Milky Way – and other galaxies. Usually the 21cm line occurs in emission. It can be observed in all directions of the sky (due to the large abundance of H). An observed line of sight is shown below: it reveals high intensity peaks where we have lots of gas (spiral arms), but the clumps are also blue– or redshifted This has provided important clues about the differential rotation of the Milky Way and its spiral structure First overall distribution of the neutral hydrogen distribution in the Milky Way from the Leiden and Parkes Surveys. Densities are given in atoms/cm-3 modern sketch of HI distribution including LMC, SMC Oort, Kerr, Westerhout 1958. MNRAS 118, 379 HII regions HII region = emission nebulae of ionized hydrogen Hot O stars radiate strongly in the UV; if they have (enough) HI around them, this will be ionized resulting in a so-called HII-region. Some examples: The Lagoon Nebulae (M8): 5,000 lyrs from Earth in Sagittarius. First light SALT image with SALTICAM UVI 120 40 s (Sept. 2005) The hot, central star, O Herschel 36 [upper left], is the primary source of the illuminating light for the brightest region in the nebula, called the Hourglass. The glare from this hot star is eroding the clouds by heating the hydrogen gas in them. This activity drives away violent stellar winds that are tearing into the cool clouds. The Orion Nebula, Messier 42 - H II region excited by 4 hot stars in the Trapezium Cluster - dark regions are opaque dust clouds in front of the nebula - Radio and IR show a rich molecular cloud behind it (see later notes) - upper part shows the reflection nebula NGC1977 (The Running Man Nebula) Close up of the Running Man: RGB combined image …by Peter Spokes/Adam Block/NOAO/AURA/NSF • HII regions form after star formation starts with a giant molecular cloud (GMC) • Hot new stars ionize their surroundings • HII regions last for a few million years before gas is dispersed • Clouds of ionized gas typically have spectra dominated by a few emission lines and a weak continuum - Strong Balmer lines • An atom in an HII region remains ionized for several 100 years, but neutral only for a few months after recombination before being ionized again • when excited HII recombines, it slowly returns to ground-state via various transitions • Most recombinations in the optical from the Balmer series n = 3 2 • Includes H at 6563Å - often use narrow band filter images around H (Recall Lyman series n =2 1 in UV: 1215 - 912Å, Paschen n= 4 3 in IR, 18750 - 8210Å) • when excited HII recombines, it slowly returns to ground-state via various transitions • The number of recombinations per unit time and volume : nrec = a ne ni with a = 3.1´10-13 cm3s -1 for T = 8000K Where ne, ni are the density of electrons and ions and alpha is the recombination coefficient (depends on temperature) • For completely ionized hydrogen we have nrec µ ne 2 • Most recombinations lead to H emission from the 3 to 2 transition, so • The surface brightness of a nebula in H is proportional to the Emission Measure EM = ò ne dl 2 (integral along LOS to the nebula) Ionized Helium He+ or He++ (respectively He II or He III) Ionization of He requires more energy than for hydrogen Only the very hot stars will have He+ regions Large HII regions will surround smaller He+ or He++ regions, which can also be seen in the spectrum Other strong emission lines (sometimes stronger than H and He) called Nebulium early 20th century •thought to be unknown element, but in 1927 I.S. Bowen showed forbidden lines of ionized O and N •Main ones are [O II] - 3726 Å, 3729Å (doublet) [O III] – 4959 Å and 5008 Å [N II] – 6583 Å (very close to Hα at 6563 Å) •Don’t see in terrestrial laboratories – too dense so collisions are more likely Strömgren Sphere: - Ionization propagates in a sphere from central star - UV radiation is absorbed very efficiently very sharp boundary between HII and HI. - In a homogenous medium, the HII region around a single star will be spherical, forming a sphere with the size proportional to temperature of star e.g. B0 V: R = 50 pc A0 V: R = 1 pc Take recombination rate nrec multiply by volume of HII region (assumed spherical) = equal to ionizing photons N produced per second radius of sphere: 1/ 3 æ 3N ö -2 / 3 rS @ ç ÷ nH è 4pa ø Recall: proportional to T As temperature of HII regions is higher than surrounding gas, it will expand; After million of years it will become diffuse and merge with ISM The Rosetta Emission Nebula surrounding the open cluster NGC2244 Strömgren Derivation of Strömgren sphere size •Assume star embedded in uniform medium of neutral hydrogen. •A sphere of radius rs around this star will become ionized - the “Stromgren radius” •Volume of sphere from setting the rate at which ionized hydrogen recombines equal to the rate at which the star emits ionizing photons i.e. all of the ionizing photons are “used up” re-ionizing hydrogen as it recombines •The recombination rate density is αn2 α is the recombination coefficient (in cm3 s-1) and n=ne=ni is the number density of ions or electrons •The total rate of ionizing photons (in photons per second) in the volume of the sphere is N*. Setting the rates of ionization and recombination equal to * ö1/3 one another, we get so 3 æ 4p rs a n2 = N * 3 3N rs = ç 2÷ 4 pa n è ø •Typical values: N* ~1049 photons/s, α ~ 3 x 10-13cm3/s and n ~10cm-3, imply Strömgren radii of 10 to 100 pc. Strömgren Sphere: - Ionization propagates in a sphere from central star - UV radiation is absorbed very efficiently very sharp boundary between HII and HI. - In a homogenous medium, the HII region around a single star will be spherical, forming a sphere with the size proportional to temperature of star e.g. B0 V: R = 50 pc A0 V: R = 1 pc Take recombination rate nrec multiply by volume of HII region (assumed spherical) = equal to ionizing photons N produced per second radius of sphere: 1/ 3 æ 3N ö -2 / 3 rS @ ç ÷ nH è 4pa ø Recall: proportional to T As temperature of HII regions is higher than surrounding gas, it will expand; After million of years it will become diffuse and merge with ISM The Rosetta Emission Nebula surrounding the open cluster NGC2244 Strömgren Because of Galactic extinction, only a few nearby HII regions are possible to observe optically go to radio or IR: • e.g. recombination of H, He • Some fraction of recombinations lead to transitions between high energy levels -> radio emission e.g. from E110 – E109 for H (5.01GHz) • provides data on Gal. structure and rotation through velocities (Doppler) and distances to these regions • Not only line emission but also radio continuum emission Bremsstrahlung or free-free emission from electrons • produced by the acceleration of a charged particle, such as an electron, when deflected by another charged particle (e.g. atomic nucleus) • Bremsstrahlung has a continuous spectrum with intensity I µ EM = ò ne dl 2 • strong IR continuum emission from thermal radiation of dust inside nebulae 2b. The Interstellar Medium 2.4 Observations of dust clouds • Dark clouds (& Bok globules, EGGs) • Reflection nebulae NASSP application 2.5 Interstellar gas Deadline 31 Aug • Atomic hydrogen (Lya, HI, Local Bubble) http://www.star.ac.za/ • HII regions • Molecular gas • Coronal gas • Stellar remnants - Planetary nebulae, - Supernova remnants • Cosmic rays Interstellar Molecules 1937, 1938: First molecular absorption lines discovered in stellar spectra: CH, CH+, CN 1970 others in UV: H2 and CO (first discovered in radio at 2.6 mm) molecular hydrogen H2 is the most abundant molecule, followed by carbon monoxide CO The detection of molecular hydrogen: one of the biggest breakthroughs in UV astronomy •strong absorption band at 1050Å • first observed with rocket in 1970 (Carruthers) •large fraction of ISM hydrogen is molecular •fraction increases strongly for denser clouds (and higher extinction) for AV > 1 mag most of the hydrogen is molecular Radio Spectroscopy Note: absorption can only be observed if bright star is ‘behind’ molecular cloud •because of dust extinction observations of molecules can not be made in optical and UV! •Until 1960s it was thought that at most di-atomic molecules existed (gas too diffuse and UV radiation to strong to allow existence of more complicated molecules) •But 1963: discovery of hydroxyl radical OH •As of 2002: about 130 molecules detected •The heaviest is HC11N with 13 atoms • Molecular lines in the radio regime occur in either absorption or emission • Three kinds of transitions (see Table 15.4 KKOPD, 2 slides back, for examples): 1. Electron transitions: correspond to changes in the electron cloud of the molecule (similar to single atoms) - found in optical and UV 2. Vibrational transitions: changes in vibrational energy of molecule generally in the IR 3. Rotational transitions: changes in rotational energy of molecule (molecules in ground state do not rotate; they have zero angular momentum; but they may be excited by collisions - generally in mm and radio • Many only been discovered in the densest clouds (like Sag B2 cloud in Galactic centre) while others are more common • The most common (H2) cannot be observed in the radio • next best are CO, OH and NH3 (ammonia) • Despite their relative abundance being only a small fraction of H2, it is more than sufficient for detection in dense clouds (e.g. Sag B2 clouds contains enough ethanol C2H5OH for 1028 bottles of Vodka) Example: radio map of the distribution of 13C16O in the very rich molecular cloud near the Orion Nebula. The contours are lines of constant intensity (Kutner et al 1976, ApJ); right where we have the dark clouds in the optical image on sheet 53) Most of the molecules detected in dense molecular clouds near HII regions, not in the actual HII regions (dissociation by high T and strong UV radiation) Three types of molecular sources have been detected near HII regions: 1.large gas and dust envelopes around HII region 2.small dense clouds within these envelopes 3.very compact OH and H2O maser sources The large envelopes have been discovered primarily in CO; also OH and H2CO (formaldehyde) •Large size and density (n ~ 103 -104 molecules/cm3) •Masses of 105-106 Msun (e.g. Sgr B2) Among the most massive objects in the MW IR observations of thermal dust radiation: •Peak at 10-100μm T ~ 30-100K Masers Some IS clouds contain small maser sources • OH, H2O and SiO emission a few million times stronger than elsewhere (amplified stimulated emission) • radiating regions of only a few AU (5-10) • related to star forming regions Central part of Orion Nebula: large crosses indicate OH masers, small crosses H2O masers Note: compared to earlier image, this region would only be a few mm in size Interlude: Relation of dust and gas to the formation of Protostars • Milky Way: M = 1011 Msun and age = 1010yrs average SFR : 10Msun / yr • This is an upper limit for present rate. Recall that O stars have a lifetime of a million years (106 years) only - earlier SFR must have been higher • Counts of O stars indicate current SF rate at 3 Msun / yr stars form in dense IS clouds (mostly located in spiral arms) contraction of cloud under its own gravity fragmentation into parts protostars • Observations: stars are not formed individually but in loose associations (recall Christmas tree siblings) of a few 100s of stars born ~ simultaneously • Theory: calculations show it is difficult to form single stars: contraction of IS cloud: if mass (gravity) is larger than pressure 1920 James Jeans: cloud with certain T and density can only collapse if mass is above a certain limit, the so-called Jeans limit: 3 M J » 3´10 4 T M sun n With n = the density in atoms/m3, and T = temperature In typical ISM Hydrogen cloud: n = 106, T = 100K MJ ~ 30 000 Msun - only in the densest and coldest clouds with n = 1012 and T = 10 K do we get 1 Msun • SF starts in clouds of a M ~ x 1000 Msun and diameter of D ~10pc • Contraction but no heating (optically thin – liberated energy gets carried away) Density increases – Jeans mass decreases separate condensation nuclei form, each contracting individually 3 cloud fragments M J » 3´104 T n M sun • Fragmentation is enhanced by ↑ rotation (conservation of ang. momentum L with contraction) • Continuation of this process – until individual condensations become optically thick Liberated energy does not get carried away anymore: • ↑ T ↑ MJ •Fragmentation ceases because pressure increases and contraction stops protostars (except for some rapidly rotating protostars – may split up binary systems) Accepted view – BUT Fragmentation process conjectural •effects of rotation, magnetic field and energy input not well understood Start of contraction? • compression of gas due to passage through spiral arm • expanding HII regions or SN explosion More insight is coming forth from IR observations •condensing clouds have 100-1000K while IR radiation can escape even densest clouds (see p 63 Fig. with maser sources BN) In Summary: the 5 phases of interstellar gas Hot Corona of Milky Way •1956 Lyman Spitzer showed: MW had to be surrounded by a very hot gas •20 years later: Copernicus satellite found evidence: Galactic coronal gas (analogy to hot solar corona) emission lines of highly ionized O, N and C (O VI, N V, and C IV) requires temp. of 100000 – 1 000 000K, also from broadness of lines •Galactic gas is evenly distributed through whole MW - extends several kpc from GP (up to 70 kpc according to recent FUSE measurements) •Density is low 10-3 atoms/cm3 (recall mean density in GP is 1 atom/cm3) forms kind of background sea in which denser and cooler ‘clouds’ may form •1980s: IUE satellite observed similar corona in LMC and in spiral arm of M100 probably common and important form of matter in galaxies •Source: • SN explosions most likely form hot expanding bubbles that will permeate galaxies • stellar winds from hot stars Planetary Nebulae (PN) (PN have nothing to do with planets; nomenclature due to similarity in appearance) Stellar evolution: •bright regions of gas also occur around stars in ‘late’ stages of their evolution •PN are gas shells expelled from the star (pulsations, stellar winds) leaving small hot blue cores; whole outer atmosphere is being ejected into space. • Estimated number in MW: 50 000 • Observed 2000 • Sizes of a few arcsec to degrees • Typical physical sizes: 0.3 pc AAO Student Fellowship Program The Australian Astronomical Observatory provides opportunities for undergraduate students to participate in research projects. Students will spend 10-12 weeks in the period Dec 2016 - Feb 2017 working at the Australian Astronomical Observatory in Sydney on research projects under the supervision of AAO staff astronomers and engineers. Students will have the opportunity to participate in a field trip to visit the telescopes at Siding Spring Observatory. Please encourage your undergraduate students to apply. The deadline for applications is: *** 31 August 2016 *** Details are available here: http://www.aao.gov.au/science/research/students/fellowships The stipend is A$700 per week. How to Apply Applications are required to be sent by e-mail. Please send your application as a single Word or PDF document attachment to the AAO Student Fellowship Coordinator, Prof. Andrew Hopkins ([email protected]). The application should include the following: • gas shell expanding at 20-30 km/s around the core of the original star (of 50000 – 100 000K) • generally more symmetrical in shape and expand more rapidly (than HII regions) (e.g. expansion rate is measurable between current images and photographs from 50 yrs ago for Lyra – see image below) • PNe will dissipate into ISM within at most 50 000 years (very quick compared to lifetime of a star), while central stars cool into white dwarfs • Expanding gas ionized from UV radiation of central star (like HII regions) • causes atoms to become excited • when electrons cascade back to lower energy levels, photons emitted in the visible • Often have bright emission lines from forbidden transitions • [OIII] at 4959Å and 5007Å – green • H (6563Å; Balmer) and forbidden ionized nitrogen ([NII] at 6583Å) – red PN Lyra (M57) Other examples of PN: Cats Eye (NGC 6543) HST WFPV2 images (1995) New H2 Ring image (from rotational transitions of molecule) From Spitzer IRAC observations Helix (NGC 7293) by David Malin (AAT) Closest PN: at a distance of d=213 pc; in the constellation Aquarius; size: 16 arcmin (1/2 full moon) N • Tadpole-like objects in ring: "cometary knots” glowing heads and gossamer tails resemble comets (but see HST image on next slide) • Each gaseous head at least twice the size of our solar system • each tail stretches about 1,000 AU • Gaseous knots supposedly result from collision between gases • The ejected hot gas collides with the cooler gas (ejected 10,000 years before) Hubble Space Telescope Helix: collision of two gases near a dying star Red light: [NII] 6584Å emission; green: H, 6563Å; blue, [OIII] 5007Å Evolution in clumps seems to correspond with age of the nebula (O’Dell 2002) clumps in older nebulae are smaller and well-formed clumps in younger nebulae larger and less sculpted Supernova Remnants •End point of evolution of massive stars •Collapse of stellar core leads to violent ejection of outer layers - remain as expanding gas cloud •About 120 SNR known in MW •Some optically visible as ring or irregular nebulae (see next 2 slides), but most are only visible in radio (because radio not susceptible to extinction) •In radio they are extended sources, similar to HII regions – BUT with polarized radiation • Emission of HII regions is thermal: free-free emission of hot plasma intensity grows or remains constant with increasing frequency, whereas SNR radiation falls off linearly • In SNR it is synchroton radiation from electron moving in spiral orbits around the magnetic field lines (not ionized by central star) Continuous spectrum over all wavelengths The Crab Nebula M1 (located in Taurus) Explosion observed in 1054 by Chinese; Crab is still expanding at a rate of 1450 km/s!! Luminosity: L = 8 x 104Lsun; mostly highly polarized synchroton radiation (thus indicating presence of relativistic electrons spiraling around magn. field lines) The continuing high luminosity and source of electrons remained a puzzle until the discovery of a pulsar at its centre - all irregular SNR have pulsars at their center and are long-living Crab Nebula looks blue due to optical synchroton emission, red filaments from H NOTE: Ring-like SNR have no pulsar: all their energy comes from SNR explosion Vexp ~ 10’000-20’000 km/s Forms shell as ejected material starts to sweep up ISM Expansion slows down and shell cools and merges with ISM after ~100’000yrs The Vela SNR (image UK Schmidt) Explosion about 11,000 years ago (may well be the first ever observed by human beings) The optical photograph (below - left) is suggestive of shock waves: • Debris from ejected SN material encounters material in ISM producing shock fronts several AU wide. • The shocks excite and ionize the ISM, causing the observed emission: When the electrons recombine with these atoms, light in many different colors and energy bands is produced A spherical, expanding shock wave is also visible in X-rays (right); ROSAT PSPC finds hot gas bubble of various million degrees (similar to Local Bubble) After Ring-like SN: SN 1987A Exploded on 23 February 1987, in LMC, visible by eye It shone as bright as 100 million suns for several months Direct observations of expansion of shell HST images 1994: Before • • • Temperature of the hot spots surges from a few thousand to a million degrees Note fading of central star: about a factor of 1 million in intensity Glowing debris of the central star heated by radioactive elements (principally titanium 44) created in SN explosion and will continue to glow for many decades. The progenitor of SN1987A did lose some mass resulting in very unusual structure Three rings: •innermost ring has d = 0.42pc (a bit over 1 lyr); lies in a plane with SN at its center (slightly inclined) • glow in the visible in OIII emission heated by UV radiation from SN reaching material supposedly was ejected 20 000 years before the explosion •2 larger rings: do not lie in plane containing the SN, but in front and behind; origin uncertain: • did star reside near NS or BH? as this source wobbles it could create jets with some kind of bipolar flow in 2 planes; possible source found at 0.1pc • large rings produce by hot fast stellar wind from blue supergiant progenitor, overtaking the slower cooler wind emitted when star was still a red supergiant •An aside: very exciting observations were based on its neutrinos the first ever observed neutrinos from another source than the Sun! neutrino burst was recorded over period of 12½ sec – 3hrs before arrival of first photons 12 events detected with Japan’s Kamiokande II Cerenkov detector 8 events in California, IMB Cerenkov detector. Confirmation of basic SN core-collapse theory (“seeing” formation of NS out of collapsed iron core) determination of upper limit of rest mass of electron neutrino: me £ 16eV Cosmic Rays Composed mainly of bare H nuclei (protons), roughly 90%, and -nuclei (9%), rest of heavier atomic nuclei and electrons They occur throughout IS space; energy density of the same order as the radiation of stars important for ionization and heating of IS gas Because they are charged interact with magnetic field change of propagation direction – no info on source of origin Energies: most have : < 10 9 eV; number decreases with increasing energy most energetic: 1020 eV (rare – 1 proton could lift a book by 1cm largest particle accelerators reach ‘only’ 1012 eV) The origin of low energy cosmic rays is difficult to disentangle as they are mixed with solar cosmic rays But gamma and radio observation allow mapping of distribution of cosmic rays in the MW: - collision of cosmic ray protons with IS HI pions which decay and form a gamma ray background - cosmic ray electrons emit synchroton radiation in IS magnetic field in radio Both emissions show strong concentration to GP; with peaks that coincide with location of SNR, such as Crab and Vela Apparently SN form cosmic rays: - SN explosion energetic particles - if SNR has a pulsar accelerate particles - shock waves of expanding SNR shell relativistic particles The end of ISM, dust and pretty pictures Revised PN Model (from presentation of Sarah Eyerman on The Nature and Origin of Molecular Knots in Planetary Nebulae) CO OI O+ O2+ O3+ He2+ He+ He0 HI Molecular Clumps shadow H2 dust H2 CO H0 H+ star light How does this relate to what we see in other galaxies? Strong correlations among total far-IR emission, H emission, and CO vs. total gas mass The CO-FIR relation is illustrated by Fig. 7 of the review by Young and Scoville 1991 (ARA&A 29, 581, reproduced from the ADS), with the CO data transformed into H2 masses: But Kennicutt (The Interstellar Medium in Galaxies, 1990): the same CO-FIR relation is also followed by a burning cigar, his Jeep, the Yellowstone forest fire, and the observable Universe . This may be another manifestation of the well-known astrophysical principle that big galaxies are big and little ones are little, so that differences among scale-linked properties are second-order effects.