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The Sky is Our Laboratory

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Do you believe we have been to the moon? How big is the Universe? ... Quasars are a very active phase of the life of galaxies, found at high redshifts. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Sky is Our Laboratory


1
The Sky is Our Laboratory

2
Your Questions first
  1. How far away can we get out out in space today?
  2. Do you believe we have been to the moon?
  3. How big is the Universe?
  4. What percent of the total known Universe is our
    star (Sun)?
  5. Could there be anything faster than the speed of
    light?
  6. Are the laws of physics universal?
  7. Is it dark in space? Would a spaceship need
    headlights?
  8. What are the exact definitions of galaxy and
    cosmos?
  9. How are stars formed? Why do hottest stars die
    young?
  10. What is the Orion Nebula?
  11. Is a white dwarf just a giant diamond?
  12. When were pulsars discovered? Do pulsars ever
    stop beaconing?
  13. What are the theories about black holes?
  14. Where do quasars come into the picture? What is a
    quasar?
  15. What is the big, main bright core in the middle
    of galaxies?
  16. How many different types of galaxies are there?
  17. What is the Local Group?
  18. What is a satellite galaxy?
  19. What will eventually happen to the Universe?

3
1. How far away have we gone into space?2.
Do you believe we have gone to the moon?3. How
big is the Universe?
  • As far as we know, humans have not gone any
    further than the Moon about 384,000 km (243,000
    miles) or 1.28 light minutes .
  • Automatic spacecrafts (robots) have been and are
    exploring the planets about 5,900,000,000 km or
    5.5 light hours.
  • Telescopes (which we will discuss today) have
    reached roughly back to when the Universe was
    only 1-2 Gyr (1,000,000,000 - 2,000,000,000
    yrs) old. Today the Universe is about 13.5 Gyr
    old. Its size, calculated as the event horizon
    is 13.5 billions of light years (225,000
    Galaxys radii)
  • 1 light year (ly) 9470 billions km 5900
    billions miles
  • distance Sun-Earth 8.3 light minutes
  • size of the Solar System 5.5 light hours
  • size of our Galaxy 60,000 ly 100 millions
    solar system radii

4
4. What percent of the total known
Universe is our star (Sun)? 5. Could there be
anything faster than the speed of light?6. Are
the laws of physics universal?
  • M(Sun) 7.5 x 10-22 M(Universe)
  • We dont know of anything faster than the speed
    of light in vacuum (about 300,000 km/s or 186,000
    miles per second)
  • the speed of light through transparent or
    translucent media is slower e.g., it is about
    124,000 km/s in diamond
  • Scientists work with the assumption that the
    laws of physics are universal. This has worked
    well so far, but challenges can always raise.

5
7. Is it dark in space? Would a
spaceship need headlights?8. What are the exact
definitions of galaxy and cosmos?
  • Yes, it is very dark in space. Outside the solar
    system, the next closest star, Proxima Centauri,
    is about 4.3 ly away. On average in our own
    Galaxy each star is about 10 ly away from every
    other star in every direction.
  • more than headlights, I would advice installing
    a radar in the spaceship (especially within and
    around solar systems) to avoid collision with
    dark bodies.
  • A galaxy is a body of stars, gas, and dark
    matter kept together by gravity
  • The cosmos is a loose definition to indicate
    the Universe, or components of it. It comes from
    Greek, to indicate an harmonious whole, opposed
    to chaos.

6
9. How are stars formed? Why do hottest
stars die young?10. What is the Orion Nebula?
  • Hottest (more massive) stars die young because
    they use up their nuclear fuel more quickly than
    less massive stars
  • L M3.5 R2 T4
  • A star 10 times our Sun is about 3,000 times
    more luminous and about 3 times hotter (not 7
    times, as also the radius grows)

7
11. Is a white dwarf just a giant
diamond?12. When were pulsars discovered? Do
pulsars ever stop beaconing?
  • A white dwarf is a dying star, which has
    terminated its nuclear fuel, and has contracted
    to roughly the size of the Earth.
  • This fate is shared by all stars with masses
    below 8 M(Sun), and they end up with masses below
    1.4 M(Sun) the Chandrasekar limit. Most WDs
    have masses around 0.6 M(Sun)
  • The core of a WD is commonly a mixture of Carbon
    and Oxygen, and is releasing as light the
    contraction heat.
  • When cold (6,000-8,000 K) they may crystallize
    into giant diamonds (first confirmed
    observationally from WD oscillations in 2004).
  • Pulsars are fast rotating neutron stars, first
    discovered in 1967. The spinning magnetic field
    of the star is producing the pulses. Neutron
    stars form from collapsing stars with masses
    below 3.2 M(Sun).

8
13. What are the theories about black
holes?14. Where do quasars come into the
picture? What is a quasar?
  • Black holes are collapsed stars with Mgt 3.2
    M(Sun). Their gravitational pull is so large that
    not even the light can escape! We can only see
    them when surrounding matter spirals into the
    hole.
  • A quasar is a very (super-)massive black hole in
    the center of a young galaxy, which is accreting
    large amounts of mass, and emitting large amounts
    of energy. Quasars are a very active phase of the
    life of galaxies, found at high redshifts.

9
15. What is the big, main bright core in
the middle of galaxies?16. How many different
types of galaxies are there?
  • It is called the bulge and it consists of
    stars, generally fairly old. Most galaxies have
    bulges..

For instance, elliptical galaxies could be
considered to consist entirely of a bulge. Most
spiral galaxies have bulges. There is a (now)
well-known relation between the size of a bulge
and the mass of the supermassive black hole in
the center of a galaxy (the Magorrian Relation)
  • Many.

10
17. What is the Local Group?18. What is
a satellite galaxy?
  • It is a group of galaxies bound together by
    gravity. The Milky Way and the Andromeda Galaxy
    are the two largest and most massive galaxies in
    the Local Group.
  • The existence of galaxy groups is predicted by
    current theories of galaxy formation
  • Another strong prediction is the presence of
    satellite galaxies, small galaxies that orbit
    large galaxies like the Milky Way.
  • The Milky Way has about 15 satellites within
    450,000 light years


11
19. What will eventually happen to the
Universe?20. What is the dark energy/matter?
  • Excellent question! It is currently
    accelerating, but its actual destiny depends on
    the density of matter and energy, and their
    nature.
  • The Universe has been accelerating for the past
    3/4 of its life, and this acceleration has been
    attributed to Dark Energy (nobody really knows
    what this is).
  • Dark Matter is also unknown, but we have
    evidence for its existence because of its
    gravitational pull (e.g., in groups of galaxies,
    and in the external regions of galaxies).
  • Most of the energy content of the Universe is
    currently attributed to Dark Energy (70), with
    only or less than 30 for Dark Matter (and about
    4.5 for ordinary matter or baryons).


12
Telescopes Our Eyes in the Sky
The twin 10-m Keck telescopes (Hawaii) are
currently the largest telescopes in existence.
Plans for larger telescopes (up to 42-m) are
currently being considered (ESO, USA)
13
Why do you need large telescopes?
Telescopes are light buckets. The bigger, the
more light they collect, and the more distant the
objects they can observe.
14
Telescopes for probing the Universe
The Universe is expanding (Ho71 /- 5 km/s/Mpc),
and is 13.5 billions years old.
15
Different telescopes for different types of light
Spitzer
Hubble
Herschel
LMT
16
Electromagnetic spectrum
17
(No Transcript)
18
The Multiwavelength Sun
Infrared
Radio
Optical
X-ray
19
A Multiwavelength Universe
  • Different wavelengths carry different
    information
  • Shorter wavelengths carry information on very
    energetic phenomena (e.g. black holes, star
    formation)
  • Optical wavelengths carry information on the
    structures of galaxies and their motions (the
    assembly of the bodies of galaxies, their size)
  • Longer wavelengths carry information on the
    chemical composition, physical state (gas and
    dust, presence, chemical elements temperature)

20
Angular Resolution
  • The bigger the telescope, the smaller the detail
    it can discriminate
  • ? 0.02??(nm) / D(cm)
  • This also depends on the type of light the
    telescope detects (the wavelength ?)
  • On the ground, the limitation is due to the
    blurring of our own atmosphere (called
    seeing). Typical values are around 0.5-1
    arcseconds, but it really depends on the
    atmopheric conditions.

21
We can go to space
Space
Ground
No atmosphere in space
22
For some types of light, space is the only
solution, as the atmosphere is opaque
23
What is up there now
  • HUBBLE
  • Launched early 1990
  • Serviced 4 times
  • 2.4-m mirror
  • 4(5) UV/Optical/IR instruments

Instruments ACS and WFPC2 UV/Optical
imagers STIS UV spectrograph/imager NICMOS
Near-IR imager/spectrometer
24
  • CHANDRA
  • Launched mid-1999
  • Non-serviceable
  • 4 nested mirrors
  • 2 instruments for low/high energy X-ray photons

PKS 0637
Instruments ACIS CCD imager/spectrometer (
HETG) HRC High resolution camera ( LETG)
3C273
25
  • SPITZER
  • Launched mid-2003
  • Non-serviceable
  • 0.85-m mirror
  • 3 mid/far-infrared instruments

Instruments IRAC Mid-infrared imager MIPS
Far-infrared imager/spectrometer IRS
Mid-infrared spectrometer
26
Are there radio telescopes in space?
27
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Sept 21st, 2007 An X-ray (Chandra) and infrared
(Spitzer) light composition of a young stellar
cluster, located only 420 ly away in the Corona
Australis. The X-ray emission comes from the hot
coronae of the young, massive stars the infrared
light is a combination of dust and protostars
emission.
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