Title: GALAXIES
1GALAXIES
2- From the background radiation, we know that the
Universe was smooth (to within one part in 104)
at an age of 1/2 million years. - Yet, from this uniformity,
- atoms, molecules, dust, stars, galaxies,
clusters of galaxieseven life, formed. - HOW?
3- Even in a smooth medium, random fluctuations
occur - From the largest recognized (superclusters of
galaxies), it appears that the largest
fluctuations had masses - Matter was affected by gravitational forces (but
not the photons)
4- Gravitation enhances density fluctuations
- Pressure inhibits density fluctuations
- Things with large mass and/or cold T are
gravitationally dominated.
5- As density fluctuations increased, and material
cooled, the big chunks became SELF-GRAVITATING - i.e., gravitational forces gtgt pressure forces
- ? CONTRACTION
- So, the first structures in the Universe were
- large clouds of H and He, separated by
- equally large voids.
6JEANS LENGTH
7Pressure
- Mechanical p F/A
- The same idea occurs in a hot/dense gas
- Relationship between pressure, density, and
temperature is called an Equation of State
8Equation of State for an Ideal gas
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10- As the large primordial cloud contracts, smaller
fluctuations within it lead to - SELF-GRAVITATION
- FRAGMENTATION
- CLUSTER OF GALAXIES
- GALAXIES
11- Turbulence, shock waves both existed in the media
? Chaotic Processes - Some portions of the collapsing galaxy-sized
clouds may have become dense enough to allow
further collapse ? star formation
12- Star formation then
- Heated the cloud from nuclear processes
- Produced heavy elements
- Two competing processes occur at the same time in
different regions of the cloud - Break Up
- Merging
- Regardless, gravitational forces operated
- Most galaxies formed in groups
13- Details of large structure of clusters,
superclusters, etc., are still controversial - Need to determine relative roles of
- Shock waves ? Spherical
- Angular Momentum ? Pancake-like structure
- Gravitational Fields ? More Uniform Distribution
14Classifications of Galaxies (By Shape)
15SPIRALS
16 BARRED SPIRALS
17Bars of stars run through the nuclear bulges of
barred spiral galaxies.
Type SBa
Type SBb
Type SBc
18 ELLIPTICAL
19Hubble devised a system for classifying galaxies
according to their appearance
ELLIPTICALS
20TTunHubble devised a system for classifying
galaxies according to their appearance
21SPIRALS
- Disk Components ? flat
- Contains
- Young stars
- Gas and dust
- concentrated into spiral arms
- The spiral arms contain younger (and more
luminous) stars HII regions. - Light contrast gtgt density contrast
- The shape and rotational velocity of the galaxy
are dictated by the mass distribution
22BARRED SPIRALS
- Spiral arms start at the ends of a luminous bar
of stars instead of at the nucleus - Everything else (star populations, gas and dust
content, etc.) similar to normal spirals - Computer simulations of normal spirals undergo
periodic and reversible excursions into barred
spirals
23ELLIPTICALS
- Very little gas or dust ? star formation mostly
completed - Either all gas has been used up in forming stars
or all remaining gas been lost through encounters
24SPIRALS
Like the Milky Way Old and young
Stars Considerable gas and dust
25ELLIPTICAL
26S0 GALAXIES
- Shaped like E0, but distribution like spirals.
However, no gas and dust content - Perhaps they were normal spirals whose gas and
dust were stripped off during collision with
other galaxies - Evidence they occur most frequently at the
center of rich clusters of galaxies, where
encounters are most common
27Hubble devised a system for classifying galaxies
IRREGULAR GALAXY to their appearance
LMC
IRREGULAR
28IRREGULARS
- Do not fit into the Hubble Sequence, since they
have no well-defined shapes. - They are often near very massive galaxies
- e.g. LMC, SMC ? Tidal forces disrupt them
- Forces introduce kinetic energy ? disrupt star
formation - They contain more gas and dust than spirals
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30OTHER GALAXIES OUTSIDE HUBBLE CLASSIFICATION
- RADIO GALAXIES
- Emit much of their energy in the radio range
- Often radio emission comes from a pair of
sources, opposite each other, and up to millions
of light-years from the optical galaxy? Great
explosion - Emission mechanism SYNCHOTRON RADIATION
- Electron moving at speeds near c, interacting
with magnetic fields
31Radio Galaxies.
Cygnus A
32SEYFERT GALAXIES
- Brighter than normal galaxies
- 10-100 times more energetic than giant
ellipticals - Emit energy at all ?
- ? - ? - UV - V - IR Radio
- The bulk of the energy comes from a region
- lt 1 ly across
33Active Galaxies bridge the gap between normal
galaxies and quasars.
- Seyfert galaxies
- luminous, star-like nuclei with strong emission
lines.
34This distant Seyfert Galaxy is likely two
galaxies undergoing collision.
35QUASARS
- Perhaps central nuclei of galaxies
- Very Bright
- Point-like sources (at times with jets)
- Highly red-shifted spectra
- 3C273 z 0.158
- Largest redshift to date z 5.3
- Compared to stars in our Galaxy
- z ? 0.0001
- and for galaxies
- z 0.01- 6.7 (10?)
- Variability on timescales as short as weeks ?
energy producing region smaller or equal to a
light-week
36 Quasars and Active Galaxies
37Why?
- Suppose a light emitting region 1 light-year in
diameter has a period of one year - When the front of the source is brightest, we see
the back of the source as it was 1 year before ?
faint and vice versa - Variability would wash out
38Size places a limit on how fast an object can
change brightness.
39A quasar emits a huge amount of energy from a
small volume.
Such rapid changes in brightness can only result
from changes small objects.
40- They are powerful emitters of
- Radio
- IR
- Optical
- UV
- X-rays
- and maybe ?-rays
413C 273s spectral lines are greatly redshifted.
42PKS 2000-030 has a z 3.773 where La and Lb
should be in the UV!!
43Quasars are the ultraluminous centers of distant
galaxies.
The greater the redshift, the farther back in
time we are seeing it. There were numerous
quasars after the Big Bang, but in todays
universe, quasars have disappeared.
44Active Galaxies bridge the gap between normal
galaxies and quasars.
- Seyfert galaxies
- luminous, star-like nuclei with strong emission
lines. - BL Lacertae objects (BL Lacs)
- featureless spectrum with a brightness that can
vary by a factor of 15 times in a few months. - Most commonly known as a Blazar.
45Quasars, blazars, Seyferts, and radio galaxies
are active galaxies.
This radio galaxy M87 is like a dim, radio loud
quasar. The core shows thermal radiation central
whereas the jet shows polarized synchrotron
radiation from relativistic electrons.
46Active galaxies lie at the center of double radio
sources.
47Active galaxies lie at the center of double radio
sources.
48Quasars, blazars, Seyferts, and radio galaxies
are active galaxies.
49Black Holes(Engines of Active Galactic Nuclei?)
- Bright
- Small
- Variable
- E mc2
- Nuclear sources
- E 0.015mc2
- over entire lifetime of star
- Gravitational collapse
- E 0.1mc2
50- Liberated during the collapse
- Very fast
- Very small
- A black hole is an object which produces such
intense gravitational field that even light
becomes trapped
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52- Notice that for uniform density,
- M? V ? R3
- So,
- R ? M1/3
- Whereas for black holes
- R ? M
- So for a black hole, the smaller the mass, the
denser the object - However, even for a black hole,
- R 3 ? 108 km
- Which is very small ? 1000 light-seconds.
53- Question
- If no light can escape a black hole, how can it
power anything? - Answer
- The energy is released as material is drawn into
the black hole, and before it has fallen into it.
54- Matter (stellar or clouds) approaches a black
hole - intense tides tear it apart
- an accretion disk forms which constantly gets
accelerated until it reaches relativistic (i.e.
near c) speeds, releasing energy - Matter is swallowed and forever disappears from
view
55Supermassive black holes are the central
engines that power active galaxies.
- The Eddington limit describes how large a
supermassive black hole must be to power an
active galactic nucleus - LEdd 30,000 (M/M?) L?
- LEdd is the maximum luminosity that can be
radiated by accretion onto a compact object. - M is the mass of the compact object.
56Supermassive black holes may be the central
engines that power active galaxies.
The rotation curve of M31 suggests a massive
compact object at the center.
57Unified model may explain active galaxies of
several different types.
- The general consensus is that the center of
active galaxies contain a super massive black
hole surrounded by a luminous accretion disk. - Variations in the density of the disk will
account for variations in brightness. - Magnetic forces will cause jets of material to
move outward.
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59Jets of matter ejected from around a black hole
may explain quasars and active galaxies.
60From where you observe it might make all the
difference ...
61Local vs. Cosmological Origin of Quasar Redshifts
- The quasars are assumed to be extremely bright
under the assumption that their redshift is
produced by the expansion of the Universe - Since v H0d
- for a very large v, d is very large
62Local vs. Cosmological Origin of Quasar Redshifts
63Of course, if the redshift were not cosmological,
the distance could be much smaller, and the
quasars intrinsic brightness much lower
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65- Some people have suggested this
- Local origin of quasars
- Redshift due to SOMETHING ELSE
66Superluminal Expansion