Title: Certificate in Astronomy: Galaxies
1Certificate in AstronomyGalaxies Quasars
- Dr Lisa Jardine-Wright
- Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge University
2Text Book Chapters
- Mainly 5 6
- Also includes elements of 7 8
- Next 2 lectures include elements that will be
covered in more detain in Module 4 Cosmology.
3Lectures 11 12 Galaxy Formation Cosmology
- A Cosmological Model
- Cosmic History
- The standard Big Bang model
- General Theory of Relativity
- Big Bang Nucleosynthesis
- Inflation
- Observing Galaxy Formation
- Can we observe galaxies forming?
- The Universe as a laboratory
- Theory of Galaxy Formation
- Monolithic -vs- hierarchical collapse
- Does light follow mass?
- Simulations of galaxy formation Ellipticals -vs-
spirals.
4Formulation of the Standard Hot Big Bang Model
- 1915 Einsteins General Theory of Relativity
meant that we could discuss the evolution of the
Universe in terms of physically. - 1922 Friedmann found solutions to Einsteins
equations to conclude that the Universe was
either expanding or contracting. - 1929 Hubble observed the recession of galaxies
due to the expansion of the Universe - 1946 Gamov predicted from nucleosynthesis that
the Universe must begin in a very hot dense phase
and that the Universe should be filled with
microwaves.
5Cosmic History
- The Universe is split into two broad eras -
radiation-dominated era and the matter-dominated
era - Before t10-6 s
- All that could exist under such high temperatures
and densities was a soup of sub-atomic particles
and radiation.
6Cosmic History
- Series of notable epochs in the evolution of the
Universe - tlt 10-6s Quark soup anti-matter and matter
annihilate releasing photons of radiation - t10-6s Formation of protons and neutrons (p
same as ionised Hydrogen)
7Cosmic History
- Series of notable epochs in the evolution of the
Universe - t lt 1min Formation of atomic nuclei of H, D, He
some Li (known as Nucleosynthesis) - During this epoch radiation scatters of free
electrons thus the Universe is opaque to us. - 400,000yrs gt t gt 15mins The Universe has
expanded and cooled to allow electrons to join
with nuclei making atoms (recombination). - Number of free electrons reduced and so photons
no longer collide with electrons decoupling - Universe becomes transparent once again (when all
atomic _at_ 400,000 yrs) - Matter domination begins
8Surface of last scattering
- The point at which the Universe becomes neutral
is where radiation no longer scatters of free
electrons. - Thus there is a sphere the surface of which is
where the radiation last scattered of the free
electrons. - Surface of last scattering
9The Radiation Cosmic Microwave Background
Radiation
- The radiation that we have referred to so far is
the CMBR. - Since the epoch of last scattering the radiation
has not interfered with matter and so provides a
test bed for the properties of the early Universe.
10Einsteins General Theory of Relativity
- Einsteins formulated the field equations
- Using the field equations we can derive the rate
of expansion of the universe - In a spatially flat universe (K0)
11Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN)
- Light elements (D, He, Li) were produced in the
first few minutes of the Big Bang. - 3mins after Big Bang the temperature of the
Universe rapidly cooled and p and n collided to
produced D. - BBN predicts that of the mass in the Universe
- 25 He
- 0.01 D
- lt0.01 Li
- These results depend critically on the density of
baryons at the epoch of nucleosynthesis. - The fact that He nowhere exists at gt 23 is
strong evidence that the Universe went through an
early hot phase.
12Problems with the Standard Model
- Flatness Problem
- In order for the observed geometry of the
Universe to be maintained as the Universe expands
and evolved the conditions in the early Universe
must be very finely tuned - Otherwise the Universe would collapse or expand
very quickly before any structure could form. - Horizon Problem
- We observe that the Universe is homogeneous and
isotropic. - For this to be the case information must have
been transmitted to and from all regions of the
Universe - this is impossible because as the
Universe expands the information would have to
travel faster than the speed of light!
13The Solution Inflation
- The problems of the standard model arises from
the fact that in the past the Universe was
decelerating in its expansion. (velocity
decreases) - Inflation is a phase in the very early Universe
of extremely rapid expansion - After inflation the Universe continues according
to the standard Hot Big Bang model.
14The Solution Inflation
- Flatness Problem
- The extremely rapid expansion means that (aH)
increases so O-1? 0. - Therefore O ? 1
- Horizon Problem
- Regions were causally connected in the period of
inflation and rapid expansion.
15Observing Galaxy Formation
- Ideally we would like to observe galaxies as they
form and evolve! - Problems
- Time taken for a galaxy to form or evolve many
100,000s and billions of years. - Cannot really predict where a galaxy would form
- Distant galaxies are extremely faint
- Solutions?
- Use the constant speed of light
- Statistical methods
16Observing Galaxy Formation
- What would we like to know?
- Sizes as a function of time?
- Brightness as a function of time?
- And therefore how many stars are being born in
the past compared with today? - Type as a function of time?
- Distribution of types and how that evolves with
the Universe? - The relation between normal galaxies and active
galaxies - Do all galaxies have supermassive black holes?
- Are there differences between the galaxies that
live in clusters and those that exist in the
field? - ..
17Observing Galaxy Formation
- Task to find the most distant galaxies in the
Universe and understand their properties. - Naturally there are problems
- Selection effects
- Automatically choosing the brightest galaxies
otherwise we wouldnt be able to see them -
quasars. - Does this mean that all normal galaxies evolve
from quasars? - Or can we just not observe normal galaxies due to
their low brightness.
18Brief Theoretical Interlude
- Theory 1 Monolithic collapse
- 60 70s
- Rapid gravitational collapse ? large galaxies ?
huge bursts of star formation at early epochs
Galaxies rapidly exhausting their fuel leaving
behind a collection of old red stars. - Hierarchical structure formation.
- Universe in which smallest mass collapses first
and merges in to progressively larger structures.
19Observing Star Formation
- How do we observe galaxies at high redshifts (z)?
- Method
- To investigate galaxies at zgt1, look for expected
strong features in the spectra of galaxies.
20Observing High-z Galaxies
- At very high redshifts the sharp break in
wavelength at the lyman break is moved into the
ultra-violet (UV). - This method enables us to distinguish between
nearby extremely red objects and high redshift
galaxies. - If a galaxy is truly distant the image will
disappear in the UV.
21UV Dropouts
22Narrow Band Ly-a Observations
- SFR of high redshift galaxies will help to
confirm the current hierarchical theory of
structure formation. - Lots of small, high redshift galaxies of low
luminosity ? Hierarchical collapse - Large galaxies with high SFR ? Monolithic
collapse - Hu, McMahon Cowie have made observations, using
the 10m Keck Telescope, of a galaxy at z5.74
(Universe 1 Gyr) - To calculate the SFR of this galaxy they used
narrowband imaging of the Ly-a peak region of the
spectrum
23Hu et al. Observations
241. CIRPASS
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29Telescopes Instrumentation
- Dr Lisa Wright,
- Astrophysics and Cosmology Back to the Future
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35Galaxy Morphologies
- Giavalisco et al. presented deep HST images of 19
Lyman-break galaxies, 6 of which we know have
2.8ltzlt3.4. - They find that light in most of these galaxies is
concentrated in a central lump. Spheroids - However the galaxies are also surrounded by low
surface brightness gaseous regions, suggesting
systems in interaction. Hierarchical merging?
36Galaxy Morphologies
37Evidence of Hierarchical Merging
38The quest is on
- Even though observations have improved hugely
over the last two decades they still do not
present us with the definitive answer to galaxy
formation. - What we would like is the distribution of galaxy
types as we look back in time. - Selection effects make this almost impossible to
investigate. - As telescopes continue to improve however we will
approach the answer.
39What Do We Understand So Far? Simulating Galaxy
Formation
- The range of scales that are important in galaxy
formation makes detailed simulations difficult. - Simulations of the formation of elliptical
galaxies have proved relatively simple compared
with the formation of disc or spiral galaxies.
Why? - We need to understand in more detail the
mechanisms of star formation and how early star
formation in a galaxy affects later star
formation.
40Forming Disc Galaxies
- Simple theoretical model of galaxy formation
- Dark matter halos provide the potential wells in
which the material of the galaxy collects and
collapses. - The gas and dust conserves its angular momentum
during the collapse to a disc. (Fall Efstathiou
80) - Galaxies form from the inside out, thus growing
with time. - Cooling and angular momentum catastrophes.
- Efficient cooling at early epochs causes the gas
to collapse into the centres of the dark halos.
(White Rees 78, White Frenk 91) - Gaseous cores subsequently merge and lose angular
momentum to their surrounding halo. (Navarro,
Frenk White 95) - Disc galaxies which are too small and have too
little angular momentum. (Navarro Steinmetz 97)
41Structure Formation Animation
50 Mpc / 155 million lt yr
42Catastrophe Solutions
- Need to prevent the gas from collapsing to form
stars at very early epochs when the dark matter
halos are still experiencing many major mergers. - Prevent all the gas from cooling by heating the
reservoir. - E.g. Supernovae and supernovae driven winds
- Maybe we need to tweak the cosmological model
- Warm dark matter
- Artificially suppress star formation
43Dark Matter
- The temperature of the dark matter sets a lower
limit on the mass of the first objects to form. - Initially hot dark matter in the form of
neutrinos was favoured. The smallest structures
that are able to form in a universe of hot dark
matter is 16 Mpc (3 million lt yrs) across. - This led to the idea that galaxies may form from
large, super-cluster size structures. Galaxy
formation theory 1. - Alternatively in a cold dark matter universe the
first structures to form are smaller than the
size of observed galaxies and so galaxies form
from the mergers of smaller objects - Galaxy formation theory 2.
44Dark Matter and Fluctuations
Galaxy Halo Scales
45Our Simulation Details 1(Wright, Efstathiou
Eke)
- Cosmology
- ?m 0.3, ?? 0.7,
- H0 65 kms-1Mpc-1,
- Artificially suppress cooling until z1.
- Simple (though unrealistic) model of stellar
feedback. - Provides a scheme to test numerical effects on
the formation of the galaxy. - Star formation criteria
- Gaseous region has to be collapsing
- ?crit gt 7 x 10-23 kgm-3
46Our Simulation Details 2
- Lbox 5 Mpc NDM Ngas 583195112
- ? Mgas 9 x 106 M
- ? Spatial resolution lt 1 kpc
- Using 40 GRAPE 3-A processors and Sun
workstation, - CPU time 3 months, z 24 ? z 0.36
- Currently only 1 simulation in sample.
- 5 Simulations at resolution, NDM Ngas 503
- 25 Simulations at resolution, NDM Ngas 343
47The GRAPEs
- The IoA grape system 5 GRAPE 3A boards each
containing 8 processors 40 processors. - GRAPE (GRAvity PipE) chips are hardwired to
calculate a plummer gravitational force law - Calculates the forces on 40 particles by up to
131,072 in any one function call. - GRAPE returns forces, potentials and neighbour
lists.
48The Story So Far Spiral Galaxies
49Disc Galaxy Formation Simulation
50Numerical Comparisons
51The Future
- Masses of distant galaxies are a key piece of
information required to tie together observable
luminous matter and simulated dark matter. - One of the other challenging aspects of deducing
the history of galaxies is establishing the
evolutionary links between samples of galaxies
observed at different epochs - Galaxy morphologies
- Chemical contents
- Although computing power and star formation
mechanisms may improve our current theoretical
models, large gains will be achieved in
observational astronomy and the development of
the next generation of telescopes.