Astr 5460 Fri., Feb. 21, 2003
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Today: Reminders/Assignments |
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Longair, Ch. 3,4-Galaxies |
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Unless noted, all figs and eqs from Longair. |
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Reminders/Preliminaries
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Astro-ph preprints: |
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http://xxx.lanl.gov/ |
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Galaxy Spectra/Modeling Assignment |
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Reading Bennett et al. 2003 (MAP) paper |
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WIRO still pending… |
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Galaxy Spectra assignment
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The textbook is rather weak when it
comes to observational properties like spectra – as budding young observers
you need to know more! |
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Find and download the galaxy spectra
templates of Kinney et al. (1996) – and read the paper! |
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Find and download the spectral
synthesis population models of Bruzual and Charlot. |
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“Fit” the elliptical template and one
spiral galaxy. |
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Show some plots indicating how
broad-band colors change with redshift assuming not evolution (up to z=2). |
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Write up your results like you would
for publication with clarity, citations, etc. |
Galaxy Masses
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Virial Theorem: A relationship between
gravitational potential energy and velocities for a dynamically relaxed and
bound system. |
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T = ½ |U|, where T is the total kinetic
energy and U is the potential energy. |
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So, for a cluster of stars or a cluster
of galaxies, measuring T (by measuring velocities) can give U and therefore
M. |
Properties of Ellipticals
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Light Distribution, 1st Hubble’s
law: |
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Much better is the de Vaucouleur’s
(1948) r1/4 law: |
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re is the radius within
which half the total light has been emitted. |
Properties of Ellipticals
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Then the total luminosity of an
elliptical galaxy can be parameterized: |
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Ie is a surface brightness,
and b/a is the apparent axis ratio of the galaxy. |
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Van der Kruit (1989) |
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Will discuss models and mass
distribution in context of galaxy clusters in section 4.3.2. |
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Fundamental Plane
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Luminosities, surface brightness,
central velocity distribution, (and others), are correlated, hence the term
“fundamental plane.” Ellipticals
populate a plane in parameter space.
BIG area of research – very useful tool and helps us understand
galaxies. |
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Faber & Jackson (1976) is a classic
in this area (you might want to look up and read this one): |
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L ~ σx where x ≈4 |
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So, get dispersion from spectrum, get
luminosity, and with magnitude get distance! |
Fundamental Plane
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Dressler et al. (1987) include all
three of the plane parameters and find a tight relationship: |
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Can also substitute in a new variable
Dn (a diameter chosen to match a surface brightness) which incorporates L and
Σ. |
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Can get distances then to various
accuracies. |
Triaxial Elliptical
Galaxies
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So, are ellipticals simple to
understand dynamically? Not so
clear. We’re seeing a 2D picture of a
3D object. |
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Elliptical galaxies rotate too slowly
for this to account for the flattening observed. In other words, their ratios of rotational
to random kinetic energy is too low. |
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Triaxial Elliptical
Galaxies
Spiral/Lenticular
Galaxies
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Light Distribution |
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Two components, spheroid + disk |
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Spheroid is like a mini-elliptical
right down to a de Vaucouleur’s law distribution |
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Exponential disk component: |
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Where h is the disk scale length (3 kpc
for the Milky Way), so total L is then 4πh2Io. |
Spiral/Lenticular
Galaxies
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Analogous relationship to the
ellipticals’ Faber-Jackson relation is the Tully-Fisher relation: |
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The width of 21cm H I line, corrected
for inclination, correlates with luminosity. |
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Again, can make a spectral measurement
plus a magnitude to estimate a distance. |
Spiral/Lenticular
Galaxies
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Tully-Fisher relation: |
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Original exponent = 2.5, later steeper,
3.5, and even steeper for near-IR H-band.
Very tight near-IR correlation so great distance indicator (recall the
Hubble assignment!). |
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Spiral/Lenticular
Galaxies
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Tully-Fisher relation interpretation: |
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Assuming mass follows light, then |
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Then most mass within r ~ h and the
maximum of the rotation curve goes as the Keplerian velocity at radius
h. Then making the same Newton/Kepler
argument: |
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Combine the equations to eliminate h
and you get that mass goes as Vmax4, and for spirals
M/L is roughly constant in the disk, so expect L ~ Vmax4 |
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Trends along Hubble
Sequence
Trends along Hubble
Sequence
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Roberts & Haynes 1994: |
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Masses from S0 to Scd roughly constant,
then decrease, and M/L roughly the same (recall these are all primarily
luminous massive galaxies – why?) |
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H I not significant in ellipticals
(< 1 in 10000), but is in spirals (0.01 to 0.15 from Sa to Sm) |
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Total surface density decreases, H I
surface density increases |
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Ellipticals are red, spirals are blue… |
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H II regions frequency increases
monotonically along the sequence (Kennicutt et al. 1989) |
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Star formation rates appear key to
these relations |
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Trends along Hubble
Sequence
Chapter 4: Galaxy
Clusters
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Large Scale Distribution of Clusters |
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Galaxy Distribution in Clusters |
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Dark Matter in Clusters |
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Forms of Dark Matter |
Cluster Catalogs
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Palomar Sky Survey using 48 inch
Schmidt telescope (1950s) |
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Abell (1958) cataloged “rich” clusters
– a famous work and worth a look |
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Abell, Corwin, & Olowin (1989) did
the same for the south using similar plates |
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All original work was by visual
inspection |
Pavo Cluster
Cluster Selection
Criteria (Abell)
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Richness Criterion: 50 members brighter
than 2 magnitudes fainter than the third brightest member. Richness classes are defined by the number
in this range: |
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Cluster Selection
Criteria (Abell)
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Compactness Criterion: Only galaxies within an angular radius of
1.7/z arcmin get counted. That
corresponds to a physical radius of 1.5 h-1 Mpc. The redshifts are (were) estimated based on
the apparent magnitude of the 10th brightest cluster member. |
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Cluster Selection
Criteria (Abell)
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Distance Criteria: Lower redshift limit (z = 0.02) to force
clusters onto 1 plate. Upper limit due
to mag limit of POSS, which matches z of about 0.2. Distance classes based on magnitude of 10th
member: |
More on Abell Clusters
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Complete Northern Sample: |
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1682 Clusters of richness 1-5, distance
1-6. |
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Counts in Table 4.2 follow: |
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This is consistent with a uniform
distribution*. |
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Space Density of Abell Clusters richer
than 1: |
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For uniform distribution, cluster
centers would be 50 h-1 Mpc apart, a factor of ten larger than
that of mean galaxies. |
Clusters of Clusters
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Based on Abell’s Northern Sample: |
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Spatial 2-point correlation function
(Bahcall): |
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Scale at which cluster-cluster
correlation function has a value of unity is 5 times greater than that for
the galaxy-galaxy correlation function. |
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Clusters of Clusters
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Peebles (1980) schematic picture: |
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Cloud of galaxies is basic unit, scale
of 50 h-1 Mpc |
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About 25% of galaxies in these clouds |
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All Abell Clusters are members of
clouds (with about 2 per cloud), and contain about 25% of the galaxies in a
cloud are in Abell Clusters (superclusters occur when several AC combine) |
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Remaining 75% follow galaxy-galaxy
function |
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In terms of larger structures, galaxies
hug the walls of the voids, clusters at the intersections of the cell walls. |
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Galaxies within Clusters
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A range of structural types (Abell) |
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Regular indicates cluster is circular,
centrally concentrated (cf. Globular clusters), and has mostly elliptical and
S0 galaxies. Can be very rich with
> 1000 galaxies. Coma is regular. |
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All others are irregular (e.g., Virgo). |
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I don’t know why he didn’t just call
them type 1 and type 2…! |
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Galaxies within Clusters
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A range of structural types (Oemler
1974) |
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cD clusters have 1 or 2 central
dominant cD galaxies, and no more than about 20% spirals, with a E: S0: S
ratio of 3: 4: 2. |
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Spiral-rich clusters have E : S0 : S
ratios more like 1: 2: 3 – about half spirals. |
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Remainder are spiral-poor clusters. No dominant cD galaxy and typical ratio of
1: 2: 1. |
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Galaxies within Clusters
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Galaxies differ in these types (Abell) |
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In cD clusters galaxy distribution is
very similar to star distribution in globular clusters. |
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Spiral-rich clusters and irregular
clusters tend not to be symmetric or concentrated. |
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Spiral-poor clusters are intermediate
cf. above. |
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In spiral rich clusters, all galaxy
types similarly distributed and no mass segregation, but in cD and
spiral-poor clusters, you don’t see spirals in the central regions where the
most massive galaxies reside. |
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cD Galaxies
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Kormendy (1982) distinguishes these
from being merely giant ellipticals. |
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Extensive stellar envelope up to 100
kpc |
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Only in regions of enhanced galaxy
density (a factor of 100 denser than the average) |
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Mutiple nuclei in 25-50% of cDs (a very
rare thing) |
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Regular cD clusters are systems that
have relaxed into dynamical equilibirum. |
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