Title: The%20Milky%20Way%20
1The Milky Way Our Galaxy
2Exam II
- A 25 or better
- B 20 or better
- C 17 or better
- D 15 or better
- F 13 or below
- Average 20.7
3Solutions to Exam III (updated)
- 1a,2b,3b,4d,5e,6a,7b,8c,9a,10c,11d,12a,
13c,14c,15c,16c,17b,18d,19c,20a,21b,22c,
23c,24e,25b,26d,27b,28c,29e,30a,31d,32b
4Toughest Questions
- Hydrostatic Equilibrium
- Temperature of Suns surface
- Star of absolute mag 4.6, apparent magnitude 3.2
5Galaxies Island Universes
- A historic tour of the discovery of the dwindling
significance of humans in the universe - From the center of the universe towards the edge
of an average galaxy amongst 100 billion others
6How do we know where we are?
- Obviously we are living on a flat Earth at the
center of the universe, as a quick look tells
us - The stars, Sun, Moon and planets rotate us
- There is no apparent curvature of the ground
- The Milky Way is a band that surrounds us
- There are no signs for any movement of the Earth
(like wind, or forces throwing us off)
7Logic to the Rescue
- How do we avoid these wrong conclusions?
- Sound data
- Flawed interpretation/reasoning
- ?Further observations are necessary to decide!
- Do we have to question everything?
- Yes, in principle.
- The signature of genius is to ask the right
question, not necessarily to answer them.
8Exploring our own Island Universe The Milky Way
- A galaxy is a huge collection of stars, gas,
dust, neutron stars, and black holes, isolated
from others and held together by gravity
9Our view of the Milky Way
- Appears as a milky band of light across the sky
- A small telescope reveals that it is composed of
many stars (Galileo again!) - Our knowledge of the Milky Way comes from a
combination of observation and comparison to
other galaxies
10How do we know?
Obviously a bogus picture of our milky way!
- Question How can we say anything about our Milky
Way, if we cannot see it from outside?
11Enter the Genius
- William Herschel (XVIII century)
- Simple model
- Assumed all stars have the same absolute
brightness - Counts stars as a function of apparent magnitude
- Brighter stars closer to us fainter stars
further away - Cut off in brightness corresponds to a cut off at
a certain distance. - Conclusion there are no stars beyond a certain
distance
12Herschels Findings
- Stars thinned out very fast at right angles to
Milky Way - In the plane of the Milky Way the thinning was
slower and depended upon the direction in which
he looked - Flaws
- Observations made only in visible spectrum
- Did not take into account absorption by
interstellar gas and dust
13Discovering other Island Universes
- Data Lots of nebulous spots known in the
nightsky - Questions What are they? All the same? Different
things? - Need more observations!
- ? Build bigger telescopes
14Famous Telescopes - Herschel
- Herschel detected Uranus (1781)
- (Uranus is visible with the unaided eye)
15Famous Telescopes Lord Ross
- 72 inch Reflector
- built during potato famine in Ireland
- Largest Telescope until Mt Wilson (1917)
16The first nebula discovered to have spiral
structure M51
17Lord Rosse (1845) M51
18Hubble Space Telescope (2007) M51
19M99 is a spiral, too!
- Q do we live in a spiral?
- Q Are we in the center of the spiral?
- Most probable answer No!
20Enter next genius
- Harlow Shapley used variable stars, e.g. RR Lyrae
stars, to map the distribution of globular
clusters in the galaxy - Found a spherical distribution about 30 kpc
(30,000 pc) across - This is the true size of the galaxy
- Sun is (naturally!) not at the center its
about 26,000 ly out
21Standing on the shoulders of Giants
- Shapley used methods developed by others to
measure the distance to globulars - Cepheid variables show luminosity-period
correlations discovered by Henrietta Leavitt - Shapley single-handedly increase the size of the
universe tenfold!
22Structure of the Galaxy
23An observer far outside our galaxy would best
describe our galaxy and the Sun's position in it
as a
- a) disk of stars with our Solar System 2/3
towards the edge. - b) disk of stars with a bulge containing our
Solar System. - c) sphere of stars centered on our Solar System.
- d) sphere of stars with our Solar System near
the edge.
24Intra-galactic Dynamics
- Three main parts of a galaxy
- Bulge (center of galaxy)
- Disk (rotating around center)
- Halo (orbiting around bulge with randomly
inclined orbits)
25Properties of Bulge, Disk and Halo
- Disk Halo
Bulge - Highly flattened spherical
football-shaped - young and old stars only old stars
young and old stars - has Gas and dust none
lots in center - Star formation none since 10
billion yrs in inner regions - White colored, reddish
yellow-white - blue spiral arms
26An up-to-date Reconstruction
27Activity Milky Way Scales
- Form groups of 3-5
- Work on the questions on the handout
- Hold on the the sheets until we talked about your
findings - Turn them in with your names on (one sheet per
group)
28Other Galaxies Hubble supersedes Shapley
- Edwin Hubble identified single stars in the
Andromeda nebula (turning it into a galaxy) - Measured the distance to Andromeda to be 1
million Ly (modern value 2.2 mill. Ly) - Conclusion it is 20 times more distant than the
milky ways radius ? Extragalacticity! - ? Shapleys theory falsified!
29Q How many galaxies are there?
- Hubble Deep Field Project
- 100 hour exposures over 10 days
- Covered an area of the sky about 1/100 the size
of the full moon - Probably about 100 billion galaxies visible to us!
30(No Transcript)
31- About 1,500 galaxies in this patch alone
- Angular size 2 minutes of arc
32Other Galaxies
- there are 100 billion galaxies in the
observable Universe - measure distances to other galaxies using the
period-luminosity relationship for Cepheid
variables - Type I supernovae also used to measure distances
- Predictable luminosity a standard candle
- Other galaxies are quite distant
- Andromeda (M31), a nearby (spiral) galaxy, is 2
million light-years away and comparable in size
to Milky Way - Island universes in their own right
33Q How does our galaxy look like from the outside?
- Probably like others, so observe them!
34Hubble Classification Scheme
- Edwin Hubble (1924) grouped galaxies into four
basic types - Spiral
- Barred spiral
- Elliptical
- Irregular
- There are sub-categories as well
35Spirals (S)
- All have disks, bulges, and halos
- Type Sa large bulge, tightly wrapped, almost
circular spiral arms - Type Sb smaller bulge, more open spiral arms
- Type Sc smallest bulge, loose, poorly defined
spiral arms
36Barred Spirals (SB)
- Possess an elongated bar of stars and
interstellar mater passing through the center
37Elliptical (E)
- No spiral arms or clear internal structure
- Essentially all halo
- Vary in size from giant to dwarf
- Further classified according to how circular they
are (E0E7)
38S0/SB0
- Intermediate between E7 and Sa
- Ellipticals with a bulge and thin disk, but no
spiral arms
39Test What type is this galaxy?
- Spiral
- Barred Spiral
- Irregular
- Elliptical
40And this one?
- Spiral
- Barred Spiral
- Irregular
- Elliptical
41Type?
- Spiral
- Barred Spiral
- Irregular
- Elliptical
42Heres a weird one!
- Spiral Elliptical
- Barred Spiral Irregular
43Solutions
- Sb (Andromeda Galaxy M31)
- E2 (Elliptic Galaxy)
- SBb (Barred spiral galaxy)
- Ir II (Irregular galaxy M82)
44Q How do we know we live in a Spiral Galaxy?
- After correcting for absorption by dust, it is
possible to plot location of O- and B- (hot young
stars) which tend to be concentrated in the
spiral arms - Radio frequency observations reveal the
distribution of hydrogen (atomic) and molecular
clouds - Evidence for
- galactic bulge
- spiral arms
45Rotation of the Galaxy
- Stars near the center rotate faster those near
the edges rotate slower (Kepler) - The Sun revolves at about 250 km/sec around the
center - Takes 200-250 million years to orbit the galaxy
a galactic year
46How do spiral arms persist?
47Spiral Density Waves
- A spiral compression wave (a shock wave) moves
through the Galaxy - Triggers star formation in the spiral arms
- Explains why we see many young hot stars in the
spiral arms
48Density (Shock) Waves
49The Mass of the Galaxy
- Can be determined using Keplers 3rd Law
- Solar System the orbital velocities of planets
determined by mass of Sun - Galaxy orbital velocities of stars are
determined by total mass of the galaxy contained
within that stars orbit - Two key results
- large mass contained in a very small volume at
center of our Galaxy - Much of the mass of the Galaxy is not observed
- consists neither of stars, nor of gas or dust
- extends far beyond visible part of our galaxy
(dark halo)
50Galaxy Masses
- Rotation curves of spiral galaxies comparable to
milky way - Masses vary greatly
51The Missing Mass Problem
- Dark Matter is dark at all wavelengths, not just
visible light - The Universe as a whole consists of up to 25 of
Dark Matter! ? Strange! - What is it?
- Brown dwarfs?
- Black dwarfs?
- Black holes?
- Neutrinos?
- Other exotic subatomic particles?
- Actually Most of the universe (70) consists of
Dark Energy ? Even stranger!
52Missing Mass Problem
Actual data
Hypothetical Keplerian motion
- Keplerian Motion more distance from center ?
less gravitational pull ? slower rotational speed
53Galaxy Formation
- Not very well understood
- More complicated than stellar formation, and
harder to observe - Formation of galaxies begins after Big Bang
- Different than star formation because galaxies
may collide and merge
54Galaxy Formation
- Galaxies are probably built up by mergers
- Contrast to break up of clouds in star formation
- Our own Milky Way is eating up the neighboring
Sagittarius Dwarf Galaxy
55Galaxy Mergers
- Start with high density of small proto-galaxies
- Galaxies merge and turn into bigger galaxies
Actual photo (HST) lots of small galaxies
56Galaxy Interaction
- Galaxy Collision NGC2207 vs. IC2163
57Collision between NGC 4038 and NGC 4039
58The Tully-Fisher Relation
- A relation between the rotation speed of a spiral
galaxy and its luminosity - The more mass a galaxy has ?the brighter it is ?
the faster it rotates ? the wider the spectral
lines are - Measuring rotation speed allows us to estimate
luminosity comparing to observed (apparent)
brightness then tells us the distance
59Active Galaxies
60Types of Active Galaxies
- Radio galaxies radiate a long radio frequencies
- Seyfert Galaxies between normal and active,
compact core - Quasars quasi stellar objects, very far away,
maybe early stage of galaxy - Note most active galaxies look normal in
visible frequencies
61Seyfert Galaxies
- Look like normal spiral galaxies
- Energy output mostly in IR and radio frequencies
- Emitted from small region nucleus of galaxy
- Nucleus of Seyfert galaxy 10,000 times brighter
than of normal galaxy
NGC 5728
62Energy Output
- Active galaxies emit most of their energy in
radio frequencies
63Quasars
- Quasi-stellar objects
- Appear like stars on photographs
- Very distant objects
- Very high luminosity
- Essentially a quasar is a galaxy with
exceptionally bright core - Might be young galaxies
64A typical Quasar
- Very distant
- Very faint
- Appears star-like
65Beyond the Galactic Scale Clusters of Galaxies
- The Local Group The Virgo Cluster
66Superclusters
67Beyond Superclusters
- Strings, filaments, voids
- Reflect structure of the universe close to the
Big Bang - Largest known structure the Great Wall (70 Mpc ?
200 Mpc!)