| Today: Articles | |
| End Ch. 12, The Milky Way | |
| Start Ch. 13, Galaxies | |
| SPIRAL WAVE rotates with galaxy, but slower than individual stars | |||
| Like moving traffic jam after an accident has been cleared | |||
| Gas (and stars) catch up with wave, move through it, eventually reach front | |||
| Just like cars catching up with moving traffic jam, eventually get through it | |||
| Gas is more crowded in wave – clouds collapse to form new stars | |||
| More collisions in the traffic jam | |||
| There are slightly more old stars in the arm too, because they speed up slightly coming into it and slow down slightly moving out of it. | |||
| But the best tracers are the things that mark recent cloud collapses: O,B stars, etc. | |||
Self Sustaining Star Formation
| Cloud collapse Þ New stars | |
| New stars Þ Supernova after few million years | |
| Supernova Þ Shock Waves | |
| Shock Waves Þ Nearby clouds collapse | |
| Differential Rotation twists pattern into spiral |
| Grand Design: Density Wave | |
| Flocculent: Self Sust. Star Form. + Diff. Rot. | |
| In most Galaxies you have some combination of the two |
| Likely Black hole | ||
| High velocities | ||
| Large energy generation | ||
| At a=275 AU P=2.8 yr Þ 2.7 million solar masses | ||
| Radio image of Sgr A about 3 pc across, with model of surrounding disk |
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| www.mpe.mpg.de/www_ir/GC | |
| Very cool, brand new, and worth a look! | |
| This is the best evidence to date for a massive black hole at the Galactic core. Now essentially “proven.” |
| The discovery of the Galaxy | ||||
| Variable stars as distance indicators | ||||
| Globular clusters | ||||
| The size and overall structure of the Galaxy | ||||
| 21 cm Hydrogen emission | ||||
| Motions in the galaxy | ||||
| The Halo | ||||
| The Disk population | ||||
| Spiral Arms | ||||
| The Nuclear Bulge | ||||
| The Rotation curve and the Galaxy’s mass | ||||
| The origin of the galaxy | ||||
| The Galactic Center | ||||
| Family of Galaxies | ||
| Classification | ||
| Properties of Galaxies | ||
| Distance; The Hubble Law | ||
| Size and Luminosity | ||
| Mass (including Dark Matter) | ||
| Evolution of Galaxies | ||
| Clusters | ||
| Mergers | ||
Types of Galaxies (pg. 254-255)
| Spirals | ||
|
Sa Sb Sc (large nuclei Þ small nuclei) (little gas,dust Þ lots of gas, dust) |
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| SBa SBb SBc (as above, with BARS) | ||
| Ellipticals | ||
| E0
E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6 E7 (spherical) (highly elliptical) |
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| Irregulars | ||
| The nuclear bulge is population II (old objects) | |
| So the Sa – Sc sequence is consistent
with little gas Þ more gas |
| Distance | |||
| Use Cepheid Variables for close objects | |||
| Other objects for which Absolute Magnitude is know: | |||
| Supernova | |||
| Planetary nebula in certain emission lines | |||
| Use “Hubble Law” for more distant objects | |||
| (Correlation of distance with radial velocity) | |||
| Diameter and Luminosity | |||
| Obtain from angular size and magnitude, combined with distance | |||
| Mass | |||
| Rotation curves | |||
| Velocity dispersion | |||
| 90 to 99% of mass is “dark matter” |
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The Hubble Law using galaxies with visible Cepheid variables.
The Hubble Law using galaxies with visible Cepheid variables.
Hubble Law Example
vr = H0 d
with H0=0.5 (mile/hr)/mile
Hubble Law Example
vr = H0 d
with H0=0.5 (mile/hr)/mile
Hubble Law Example
vr = H0 d
with H0=0.5 (mile/hr)/mile
Hubble Law Example using relative vr and relative d
The Hubble Law using
secondary distance indicators
Ho = 72 ±8
km/s/Mpc
| Galaxies live in clusters | ||
| Rich clusters: thousands of galaxies | ||
| Poor clusters: Few than a thousand | ||
| Galaxies live in clusters | |||
| Rich clusters: thousands of galaxies | |||
| Poor clusters: Few than a thousand | |||
| Fundamental difference between stars and galaxies: | |||
| Stars live isolated lives: | |||
| They are much smaller than distance between them | |||
| They virtually never collide | |||
| Galaxies are not isolated | |||
| They are only slightly smaller than the distances between them | |||
| The can (and do) collide, and interact with gas within clusters | |||
| Stars pass “through” each other, but orbits around galaxy disrupted | ||
| Gas clouds collide | ||
| Gas stripped away from stars | ||
| Collisions cause bursts of star formation | ||
| Ellipticals may be those galaxies which have suffered collisions | ||
| Spirals may be those galaxies which have not suffered collisions | ||