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Hey there! Pick up a new bellwork sheet from the lab table 2 and complete bellwork. Week of: 1/26-1/30 In your Table of Contents • Today’s date is January 26, 2015. • Add Galaxies Notes to your Table of Contents. This will take up two pages. • Add Stars Notes to your Table of Contents. This will take up two pages. Galaxies • Pages: 234-237 • Galaxies are large groupings of stars in space. • Galaxies come in a variety of sizes and shapes. • The largest galaxies contain more than a trillion stars. • Galaxies began to be classified by their shapes in the 1920s by Edwin Hubble. Types of Galaxies • Spiral Galaxies- a huge bulge at the center and very distinctive spiral arms. • Hot blue stars in the spiral arms make the arms in spiral galaxies appear blue. • The center of the galaxy appears yellow because it contains cooler stars. Types of Galaxies • Elliptical galaxies have very bright centers and very little dust and gas. • These galaxies are cucumber shaped with the round end facing us. • Because there is so little gas, there are no new stars forming, and therefore elliptical galaxies contain only old stars. Types of Galaxies • When Hubble first classified galaxies, he had a group of leftovers. He named them “irregulars.” • Irregular galaxies are galaxies that do not fit into any other class. • As their name suggests, their shape is irregular. • The gravity of large spiral galaxies may be distorting the shape of these galaxies. Contents of Galaxies • Galaxies are composed of billions and billions of stars. But besides the stars and the planetary systems many of them probably have, there are larger features within galaxies that are made up of stars or the material of stars. Nebulas • In space, nebulas are giant clouds of gas and dust. • Some types of nebulas glow by themselves, while others absorb light and hide stars. • Some nebulas are regions where new stars form (like the Eagle nebula to the left). • Spiral galaxies generally contain nebulas, but elliptical galaxies do not. Quasars • Among the most distant objects are quasars, which look like tiny points of light. • Quasars are among the most powerful energy sources in the universe. • The quasar at the right is as powerful as 10 billion suns. • Some scientists think they may be young galaxies with massive black holes at their centers. Learn about the Galaxy Video Pictures of the Hubble Telescope Glad you’re here! 1/27 • Grab a N2K and begin working. • You will be timed, so use your time wisely! The Truth about Stars Stars • Pages: 228-233 • Most stars look like faint dots of light in the night sky. • But stars are actually, huge, hot, brilliant balls of gas trillions of kilometers away from Earth. • How do astronomers learn about stars when they are too far away to visit? They study starlight! Which has the hottest flame? Number 4, the blue flame, is actually the hottest! Color of Stars • The different colors of different stars mean that they have different temperatures. • Red is a “cooler” color • Blue is a “hot” color Classifying Stars • Stars are classified by how hot they are. • Class O stars are blue- they are very hot, the hottest of all stars. Types of Stars Clas s Color Surface Temperature (°C) Elements detected Examples of stars O blue above 30,000 helium 10 Lacertae B blue-white 10,000-30,000 helium and hydrogen Rigel, Spica A blue-white 7,500-10,000 hydrogen Vega, Sirius F yellowwhite 6,000-7,5000 hydrogen and heavier elements Canopus, Procyon G yellow 5,000-6,000 calcium and other metals The sun, Capella K orange 3,500-5,000 calcium and molecules Arcturus, Aldebaran M red less than 3,500 molecules Betelgeuse, Antares Distance to the Stars • Because they are so far away, astronomers use light-years to give the distances to the stars. • A light-year is the distance that light travels in one year. • Because the speed of light is about 300,000 km/s, it travels almost 9.5 trillion kilometers in one year. The Life Cycle of Stars The star formation region N11B in the LMC (our neighborhood galaxy) taken by WFPC2 on the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. • Just like people, stars are born, grow old, and eventually die. • They are born when clouds of gas and dust come together and become very hot and dense. The Life Cycle of Stars • As stars get older, they lose some of their material. • Usually this is a gradual change, but sometimes it happens in a big explosion. • Either way, when a star dies, much of its material returns into space. • There some of it combines with more gas and dust to form new stars. Betelgeuse is a red supergiant star approaching the end of its life cycle • Stars similar to the sun are called main sequence stars. • What color of stars is our sun? (HINT: use the chart on pages 230-231 to figure it out!) When Stars Get Old • Stars much larger than the sun may explode with such violence that they turn into a variety of strange new objects. Supernova • A supernova is basically the death of a large star by explosion. • A supernova explosion is so powerful that it can be brighter than an entire galaxy for several days. • Heavy elements, such as silver, gold, and lead, are formed by supernova explosions. Black Holes • Sometimes the leftovers of a supernova are so massive that they collapse to form a black hole. • A black hole’s gravity is so strong that it can pull in material from a nearby star and not even light can escape. Supernova & Death of a Star Meet the Black Hole Experts