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The Universe in the Infrared So, what amazing, astounding new science have we learned with Spitzer? Images courtesy NASA/JPL - Caltech Funded by NASA’s Spitzer Science Center Outline Solar System Nearby stars Protostars and protoplanetary disks Galaxies The distant Universe The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 2 Comet Debris Tails @ 24 mm Comets can have 3 types of tails gas dust debris tails Debris tails are formed from mm to cm sized particles shed by the comet Debris tails follow the orbit of the comet These are the particles that produce meteor showers Daniel Kirkwood! The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 3 Vega and Fomalhaut • Debris disks around nearby stars – both about 25 LY • Vega’s is huge – Seen face-on – 20 times larger than the Solar System – Mass 1/3 of Moon’s – Recent collision of Pluto-sized objects? • Fomalhaut’s is seen edge-on The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 4 Alien Asteroid Belt • A dusty asteroid belt circling the star HD 69830 • Detected from IR emissions from dust • 25 x the mass of our own asteroid belt • Or is it a super-comet (Pluto-sized?) – forsterite grains like Hale-Bopp Artist’s conception The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 5 Planets Circling a Brown Dwarf? • OTS 44 is a brown dwarf – too faint to see in visible light – intermediate between a star and a planet – 15 x mass of Jupiter • Encircled by a dust disk • Could it harbor planets? The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 6 Massive Star Embryos Hidden in Dust Spitzer sees stars forming inside knots of cold dust Infalling material warms, and glows in the infrared The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 7 How Stars Form Stars form when huge clouds of gas and dust collapse due to gravity When the center becomes hot and dense enough, it blows away the cocoon, revealing the new star inside At infrared wavelengths, we can see inside the cocoon as the star forms The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 8 A Surprise from Spitzer Left: optical sky survey image Right: Spitzer 3-color composite: • Blue = 3.6 mm • Green = 8.0 mm • Red = 24 mm L1014 is 600 LY distant in the constellation Cygnus The central yellow “star” in the center is a faint, forming star, possibly a brown dwarf. The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 9 The Elephant Trunk: A Nearby Star-Forming Region IR composite image Spitzer reveals protostars forming in the Elephant Trunk Nebula far infrared image visible 2,450 LY in Cepheus The Universe in the Infrared hot young protostars embedded in dust Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 10 A New Milky Way Globular Cluster Toward the constellation Aquila Distance: 9000 LY The Universe in the Infrared Age: ~ 13 Gyr Mass: 300,000 MSun Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 11 Milky Way Twin: NGC 7331 The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 12 Distant, Dusty Galaxies Spitzer has found optically invisible galaxies so distant that we see them as they were only 3 billion years after the Big Bang. These galaxies are obscured by silicate dust, suggesting that planets could have formed even at this early time in the history of the Universe. Higdon et al. 2005, Ap.J., 626, 58 The Universe in the Infrared Artist’s conception Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 13 Even more distant galaxies… At even greater distance, only 2 Gyr after the Big Bang, Spitzer finds supermassive black holes in galaxies shrouded in dust. X-rays from some of these black hole galaxies are seen with the Chandra X-ray telescope, but they give off too little visible light to be seen with Hubble. The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 14 Spitzer Continues to Amaze! The Universe in the Infrared Pilachowski / August 2005 Slide 15