Download Ch16: The Milky Way

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Corona Borealis wikipedia , lookup

Boötes wikipedia , lookup

Cassiopeia (constellation) wikipedia , lookup

History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses wikipedia , lookup

Space Interferometry Mission wikipedia , lookup

Rare Earth hypothesis wikipedia , lookup

Cygnus (constellation) wikipedia , lookup

Serpens wikipedia , lookup

International Ultraviolet Explorer wikipedia , lookup

Aquarius (constellation) wikipedia , lookup

Observational astronomy wikipedia , lookup

Lyra wikipedia , lookup

Perseus (constellation) wikipedia , lookup

Spitzer Space Telescope wikipedia , lookup

CoRoT wikipedia , lookup

Cosmic distance ladder wikipedia , lookup

Star catalogue wikipedia , lookup

Stellar classification wikipedia , lookup

Ursa Minor wikipedia , lookup

Cygnus X-1 wikipedia , lookup

Corvus (constellation) wikipedia , lookup

IK Pegasi wikipedia , lookup

Hipparcos wikipedia , lookup

Stellar evolution wikipedia , lookup

Ursa Major wikipedia , lookup

Nebular hypothesis wikipedia , lookup

R136a1 wikipedia , lookup

Timeline of astronomy wikipedia , lookup

Stellar kinematics wikipedia , lookup

Star formation wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
QuickTime™ and a
decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Chapter 16
The Milky Way
QuickTime™ and a
decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
sun
Herschel “discovered” that we live in a disk of stars
Doppler-velocity measurements tell us we live in a spiral galaxy
Components of a spiral galaxy:
• Disk
• Nuclear bulge
• Halo
halo
disk
bulge
Spiral Galaxy
Disk
Component:
stars of all
ages,
many gas
clouds
Spheroidal
Component:
bulge & halo:
old stars,
Very little gas
& dust
Halo Stars: Population II
0.02-0.2% heavy elements (O, Fe, …),
only old stars
Halo stars
formed first,
then stopped
Disk Stars: Pop. I
2% heavy elements,
stars of all ages
Disk stars
formed later,
kept forming
Stars in the disk all orbit in the same direction with a
little up-and-down motion
Orbits of stars
in the bulge
and halo have
random
orientations
Multiple
supernovae
create huge hot
bubbles that can
blow out of disk
Gas clouds
cooling in the
halo can rain
back down on
disk
Star-gas-star
cycle
Recycles gas
from old stars
into new star
systems
The orbital speed (v) and radius (r) of a star on
a circular orbit around the galaxy tells us the
total mass (Mr) contained within that orbit
Gravitational force = centripetal force
GMr m mv 2

2
r
r
2

rv
Mr 
G
Mr
v
r
QuickTime™ and a
decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
QuickTime™ and a
decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Fritz Zwicky discovered dark matter in 1933
(Coma cluster)
Sun’s orbital
motion (radius
and velocity) tells
us mass within
Sun’s orbit:
1.0 x 1011 MSun
The total amount of
light suggests ~ few
x 109 Msun
Dark matter!
Galactic Center
Swirling gas near center
Orbiting star near center
Stars appear to
be orbiting
something
massive but
invisible … a
black hole?
X-ray flares
from galactic
center suggest
that a black
hole
occasionally
tears apart
chunks of
matter as it
falls in
Galactic Center (Chandra, Hubble, Spitzer)
Best hypothesis for how galaxies form:
1. A giant cloud of H and He condensed
after the Big Bang
2. halo stars (oldest) formed first, in
clumps, cloud contracted due to gravity.
These clumps later merged.
3. Bulge stars form next
4. Remaining gas settled into spinning disk
5. Star formation continues as long as there is
material in the ISM