Survey
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Homework # 6 is due on Tuesday, November 22nd. Homework # 7 starts on Tuesday, November 22nd. It is due on Thursday, December 1st. As we approach the end of the semester: Quiz # 6 takes place on Tuesday, November 29th; The third mid-term exam will take place on Tuesday, December 6th; Quiz # 7 will take place on Thursday, Dec. 8th; 2 Chapters: 70, 71, 72, 73.2, 73.3 3 Our Galaxy looks like a flattened `pancake of stars, gas, and dust with a `bulge in the center. It is about 12 kpc in radius (1 kpc = 1000 pc; 1 pc = 3.26 lys) We are located about 8 kpc from the center. Many other galaxies look like the Milky Way The Galaxy is a gravitationally-bound structure, containing about 100,000,000,000 4 stars. We cannot see it from `outside so we either use similar galaxies or models 5 6 About 2 million light years away. Same size as the Milky Way. Another island universe! Many galaxies, including the Milky Way are slowly rotating disks Galaxies are the building blocks of the Universe 7 What is the shape of the Milky Way galaxy? How do we know where we are in the Galaxy? What wavelengths of radiation effectively penetrate the dusty interstellar medium? How do we know the rotating structure of the Galaxy? 8 What is a galaxy: § Galaxies as the building blocks of the Universe The three basic infos about the Galaxy: § The Milky Way is an ecosystem for stars. § The Milky Way is mostly empty space (about 1 star for 10 pc3; 1 pc = 3.26 lys) … but it is rather dusty. § The Milky Way barely moves at all on the scale of a human lifetime (however, it spins at 220 km/s; but it is so huge that 1 rotation takes 240,000,000 years). 9 To measure mass, we need orbital motions Sun orbits Center of Galaxy at v~220 km/s and distance r~8.5 kpc Circumference is 2π r; at that speed period of rotation is 240 million years Thus, mass inside the Sun orbit is (Third Kepler Law): MR-Sun = (2 π)2 r3 / G P2 ~ 0.9 x 1011 Mo Including the mass outside the Sun, one actually finds: MTot ~ 4 x 1011 Mo However, mass in star (from star counting) is much less: MStar ~ 0.8 x 1011 Mo 10 Key Parts: Globular clusters - disk: flattened, rotating; stars rotate along circular orbits - halo: non-rotating; however, stars and globular clusters still orbit, and orbits are elliptical Halo Bulge Disk - bulge: around the center of the Galaxy 11 By counting stars along various directions, astronomers understood that the Galaxy had the shape of a disk. But the globular clusters in the halo (around) the Milky Way have told us two important things about our own galaxy: § The Sun is not at the center of the galaxy § The galaxy is a much larger system than it appeared based on early observations 12 1920: Harlow Shapley Observed that the globular star clusters were centered about a point that was displaced from the Sun. Shapley proposed that the point was the center of the Milky Way. 13 Basic components. I. Disk: Young blue stars (Pop I, a few billion years old), gas, dust, metal rich young clusters; disk contains spiral arms Bulge: Mainly old red stars (Pop II, many billion years old), some gas, and a supermassive black hole Halo: Old stars (Pop II), metal poor, globular clusters 14 (A Reminder) Survey Question What characteristic of a star would imply that many star generations preceded it? 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) a a a a a high hydrogen abundance high helium abundance high metal abundance low metal abundance low helium abundance 15 (A Reminder) Survey Question What characteristic of a star would imply that many star generations preceded it? 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) a a a a a high hydrogen abundance high helium abundance high metal abundance low metal abundance low helium abundance 16 The Milky Way disk contains 4-5 spiral arms 17 Disk supported by rotation Halo supported by random motion Bulge supported by random motion and small rotation Formation (over many 108 years): • Halo/Bulge old: rapid fragmentation and collapse of gas • Disk young: progressive collapse of gas, dissipation and formation of rotating disk, star formation 18 19 M33 Dust – a hindrance to our study of the Milky Way A view at visible wavelengths of the galactic plane. Dust is generated in the late stages of low and high mass stars, when carbon and silicon is dredged up from the cores and ejected in stellar winds, planetary nebulae, and possibly supernova remnants. The blocking of visible light by dust is called dust extinction. 21 If the dust is thick enough, visible light is absorbed (or scattered) and 22 only the longer wavelengths get through. Radio Microwave longer wavelength (redder) Blocked by Infrared Interstellar Visible Dust UV X-ray shorter wavelength (bluer) 23 Very Large Array Chandra X-ray Observatory 24 26 The Halo doesn t have too much dust, so we can see right through it with optical telescopes. 28 The Halo doesn t have too much dust, so we can see right through it with optical telescopes. In fact, looking through the halo we can see other galaxies. 29 30 Main Sequence turn-off point gives age of cluster Our Galaxy is about 13 billion years old! 31 Very Large Array • As a result of dust extinction, most of what we know about the disk of our galaxy has been learned from observations at radio and IR wavelengths. Interstellar hydrogen emits strongly at 21cm wavelengths. 33 Survey Question Why do we expect to find hydrogen in the interstellar medium? 1) hydrogen is produced in stars 2) hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe. 3) hydrogen is the only thing that emits at radio wavelengths. 4) hydrogen is preferentially expelled by stars 5) hydrogen is preferentially attracted by large masses 34 Survey Question Why do we expect to find hydrogen in the interstellar medium? 1) hydrogen is produced in stars 2) hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe. 3) hydrogen is the only thing that emits at radio wavelengths. 4) hydrogen is preferentially expelled by stars 5) hydrogen is preferentially attracted by large masses 35 You are here Looking for 21-cm wavelengths of light … § emitted by interstellar hydrogen § as we look along the disk of the Milky Way (from inside), we see 21-cm photons Doppler shifted varying amounts § this allows the velocity and mass of interstellar hydrogen to be mapped 36 37 38 The Structure of the Milky Way Disk The dominant structures in the disk are the spiral arms. Spiral arms are density waves that move at different velocities from the stars. What is a density wave? 39 40 The gas and stars in the galaxy rotate at a different rate than the spiral arms (density waves) 41 The gas and stars in the galaxy rotate at a different rate than the spiral arms (density waves) 42 The gas and stars in the galaxy rotate at a different rate than the spiral arms (density waves) 43 The gas and stars in the galaxy rotate at a different rate than the spiral arms (density waves) 44 The gas and stars in the galaxy rotate at a different rate than the spiral arms (density waves) 45 Survey Question We find mostly hot, massive stars in the spiral arms of galaxies because 1) hot, massive stars are preferentially produced in the spiral arms 2) less massive stars live long enough to rotate out of the spiral arms 3) supernovae destroy the less massive stars in the spiral arms 4) there is too high a density in the spiral arms to create low-mass stars 46 Hot, bright, blue highmass stars light-up the spiral density waves. 47 There is a continuous reprocessing of gas in the galaxy into stars. Stars form from dense gas in molecular clouds. Stars age and eject their outer layers. The ejected gas eventually finds its way back into an overly dense region and become part of the next generation of stars. This process is repeated as long as there is enough hydrogen around to create new stars. § Our Galaxy contains sufficient gas to live another ~10 billion years; it forms stars at a pace of a few per year. 48 49 50 Chandra survey of the Galactic center Red: 1-3 keV Green: 3-5 keV Blue: 5-8 keV 51 Wang et al. (2002) 52 It is the site of energy `flares It contains a supermassive black-hole 53 • More than 5000 km/s at a mere 17 light hours distance -- about 3x the size of our solar system. • 4 million solar masses within this distance. MPE: www.mpe.mpg.de/www_ir/GC/gc.html 54 • Most other galaxies have such `monster’ objects in their centers • Sometimes these objects are very active: the material falling into the black hole `lights up’, producing an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) or, in the most extreme cases (and at the beginning of the Universe’s life), a Quasar. 55