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Week 8 The Milky Way Reading: Chapter 13, Sections 1-5,7 (12 pages) Homework for Next Time: www.galaxyzoo.org Question Which of these is a picture of the Milky Way? A B C D The Milky Way Andromeda: MW’s Sister Galaxy Angular Size Our Galaxy is a spiral galaxy. Here are two other spiral galaxies, one viewed from the side and the other from the top, which are thought to resemble the Milky Way: From Earth, we see few stars when looking out of the galaxy (red arrows), many when looking in (blue and white arrows). The Milky Way across the sky An infrared view of our galaxy shows much more detail of the galactic center than the visible-light view does, as infrared is not as much absorbed by gas and dust. • Nuclear Bulge • Diameter ~20,000 ly • Disk • Diameter ~100,000 ly • ~2000 ly thick • Spiral Arms • Young stars • Halo • Very large • Spherical distribution • Old stars Galactic Structure The galactic halo and globular clusters formed very early; the halo is essentially spherical. All the stars in the halo are very old, and there is no gas and dust. The galactic disk is where the youngest stars are, as well as star formation regions – emission nebulae, large clouds of gas and dust. Surrounding the galactic center is the galactic bulge, which contains a mix of older and younger stars. Galactic Structure Stellar orbits in the disk are in a plane and in the same direction; orbits in the halo and bulge are much more random. Measuring the Milky Way How do we know about distances and structures in the Milky Way? Two ways: 1) Variable Stars 2) Radio Mapping Variable Stars on the HR Diagram How Variable Stars Work Slowly pulsate (change in size and temperature) • Star compressed: heats up, pushes outer layers out • Star expands: cools and contracts • Cycle repeats Some Types of Variable Stars RR Lyrae • Low mass variable stars • Periods shorter than 1 day Cepheids • High mass variable stars • Longer periods Periods of Variable Stars The upper plot is an RR Lyrae star. All such stars have essentially the same periods (0.5 to 1 day). The lower plot is a Cepheid variable; Cepheid periods range from about 1 to 100 days. The usefulness of these stars comes from their period-luminosity relation: Luminosity vs. Brightness Two stars that appear equally bright might be a closer, dimmer star and a farther, brighter one: Distances From Variable Stars How to get the distance of a variable star: 1) Measure the apparent brightness 2) Measure its period 3) Use the period-luminosity relation to determine its intrinsic brightness (luminosity) 4) Use the relationship between apparent brightness and luminosity to determine the distance RR Lyrae stars all have about the same luminosity; knowing their apparent brightness allows us to calculate the distance. • Cepheids have a luminosity that is strongly correlated with the period of their oscillations; once the period is measured, the luminosity is known and we can proceed as above. Milky Way Scales Tutorial Radio Mapping • Radio waves can penetrate clouds of gas and dust. • Gas and dust absorb light at specific wavelengths (e.g. @ 21 cm). • If clouds are moving, Doppler shifts cause absorption to be shifted. • So, can see more than one set of clouds. Radio Mapping Cosmic Fingerprints Spectral lines are like fingerprints – they identify the element that produces them. We use these fingerprints to study the chemical composition and distances of objects in space. Spiral Arm Structure from Radio Mapping Spiral Arms 4 major arms, some shorter arms Sun is in shorter Orion arm Major arms: 1) Sagittarius arm – towards Galactic center 2) Perseus arm – away from Galactic center 3) Centaurus arm 4) Cygnus arm What Causes the Spiral Arms? The spiral arms cannot rotate along with the galaxy; they would “curl up”: Rather, they appear to be density waves, with stars moving in and out of them much as cars move in and out of a traffic jam: Spiral Arms as Cosmic Traffic Jams Globular Clusters Globular clusters are spherically distributed in the halo Variable stars tell you distance. Finding the Galactic Center How to Find the Galactic Center 1) Locate globular clusters in the halo 2) Determine distances to globular clusters using variable stars in the clusters 3) Find center of globular cluster distribution; this is the Galactic center Our Sun is ~28,000 lt-yrs from the Galactic Center The Galactic Center This is a view towards the galactic center, in visible light. The two arrows in the inset indicate the location of the center; it is entirely obscured by dust. These images, in infrared, radio, and X-ray, offer a different view of the Galactic center. Sagittarius A* At Galactic center, there is strong radio and X-ray emitter called Sagittarius A*. Near Sag A*, the gas and dust are moving very fast. 6 Need a mass of ~4x10 solar masses to keep this material from flying away. Thus Sagittarius A* is probably a supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy. The Galactic Center Infrared zoom-in to the Galactic Center Black Hole at the GC? These stars are very close to the galactic center. The orbit on the right is the best fit; it assumes a central black hole of 3.7 million solar masses. Adaptive Optics BH Orbits http://astro.unl.edu/classaction/questions/m ilkyway/ca_milkyway_bhstarorbit.html Galactic Center Movie IR Movie https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zAtnBzDZvsk Next Time Other Galaxies Reading: 15.1, 15.3 galaxyzoo.org