Title: AY202a Galaxies
1AY202a Galaxies DynamicsLecture 2 Basic
Cosmology, Galaxy Morphology
2- COSMOLOGY is a modern subject
- The basic framework for our current
- view of the Universe rests on ideas and
- discoveries (mostly) from the early 20th
- century.
- Basics
- Einsteins General Relativity
- The Copernican Principle
- Fundamental Observations Principles
3- Fundamental Observations
- The Sky is Dark at Night (Olbers P.)
- The Universe is Homogeneous on
- large scales (c.f. the CMB)
- The Universe is generally Expanding
- The Universe has Stuff in it, and the
- stuff is consistent with a hot
- origin Tcmb 2.725o
4Basic Principles
- Cosmological Principle (aka the Copernican
principle). There is no preferred place in space
--- the Universe should look the same from
anywhere The Universe is
HOMOGENEOUS and ISOTROPIC.
5Principles
- Perfect Cosmological Principle The Universe is
also the same in time. The STEADY
STATE Model (XXX) -
Anthropic Cosmological Principle - We see the Universe in a preferred state(time
etc.) --- when Humans can exist
6Principles
- Relativistic Cosmological Principle The Laws of
Physics are the same everywhere and everywhen - (!!!) absolutely necessary (!!!)
- And we constantly check these
7Mathematical Cosmology
- The simplest questions are Geometric.
- How is Space measured?
- Standard 3-Space Metric
- ds2 dx2 dy2 dz2
- dr2 r2d?2 r2sin2? df2
- In Cartesian or Spherical coordinates in
- Euclidean Space.
8 - Now make our space Non-Static, but homogeneous
isotropic ? - ds2 R2(t)(dx2 dy2 dz2)
- And then allow transformation to a more general
geometry (i.e. allow non-Euclidean geometry) but
keep isotropic and homogeneous
9- ds2 (11/4kr2) -2 (dx2dy2dz2)R2(t)
- where r2 x2 y2 z2, and k is a
- measure of space curvature.
- Note the Special Relativistic
- Minkowski Metric
- ds2 c2dt2 (dx2 dy2 dz2)
10 - So, if we take our general metric and add the 4th
(time) dimension, we have - ds2 c2dt2 R2(t)(dx2 dy2 dz2)/(1kr2/4)
- or in spherical coordinates and simplifying,
- ds2 c2dt2 R2(t)dr2/(1-kr2) r2(dq2sin2q
df2) - which is the (Friedman)-Robertson-Walker
Metric, a.k.a. FRW
11 - The FRW metric is the most general,
- non-static, homogeneous and isotropic
- metric. It was derived 1930 by Robertson
and Walker and perhaps a little earlier by
Friedman. - R(t), the Scale Factor, is an unspecified
function of time (which is usually assumed to be
continuous) - and k 1, 0, or -1 the Curvature Constant
- For k -1 or 0, space is infinite
12Rasin Bread Analogy
13 K 1 Spherical c lt pr K -1
Hyperbolic c gt pr K 0 Flat c pr
14What about the scale factor R(t)?
- R(t) is specified by Physics
- we can use Newtonian Physics (the
Newtonian approximation) but now General
Relativity holds. - Start with Einsteins (tensor) Field Equations
- Gmu 8pTmn Lgmu and
- Gmu Rmn - 1/2 gmu R
15 - Where
- Tmn is the Stress Energy tensor
- Rmn is the Ricci tensor
- gmu is the metric tensor
- Gmu is the Einstein tensor
- and R is the scalar curvature
- ? Rmn - 1/2 gmu R 8pTmn Lgmu
- is the Einstein Equation
16 - The vector/scalar terms of the Tensor Equation
- give Einsteins Equations
- (dR/dt)2/R2 kc2/R2 8pGe/3c2Lc2/3
- energy
density CC - 2(d2R/dt2)/R (dR/dt)2/R kc2/R2
-
-8pGP/c3Lc2 -
pressure term CC
17 - And Friedmans Equations
- (dR/dt)2 2GM/R Lc2R2/3 kc2
- So the curvature of space can be found as
- ? kc2 Ro2(8pG/3)ro Ho2
- if L 0 (no
Cosmological Constant) - or
- (dR/dt)2/R2 - 8pGro /3 Lc2/3 kc2/R2
- which is known as Friedmans Equation
18Critical Density
- Given
- kc2 Ro2 (8pG/3)ro Ho2
- With no cosmological constant, k 0 if
- (8pG/3)ro Ho2
- So we can define the critical density as
- ?crit 3H02/ 8pG 9.4 x 10-30 g/cm3
-
for H70 km/s/Mpc
19- COSMOLOGICAL FRAMEWORK
- The Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
- Metric
the Cosmic Microwave Background - THE HOT BIG BANG
20 ?
21Cosmology is now the search for three numbers
the geometry
- 1. The Expansion Rate Hubbles Constant H0
- 2. The Mean Matter Density O (matter) OM
- 3. The Cosmological Constant O (lambda) O?
- 4. The Geometric Constant k -1, 0, 1
- Nota Bene H0 (dR/dt)/R
- Taken together, these numbers describe the
geometry of space-time and its evolution. They
also give you the Age of the Universe.
.
22- The best routes to the first two are in the
Nearby Universe - H0 is determined by measuring distances
and redshifts to galaxies. It changes with time
in real FRW models so by definition it must be
measured locally. - W(matter) is determined locally by
(1) a census, (2) topography, or (3) gravity
versus the velocity field (how things move in the
presence of lumps).
23Other Basics
- Units and Constants
- Magnitudes Megaparsecs
- http//www.cfa.harvard.edu/huchra/ay145/constants
.html - http//www.cfa.harvard.edu/huchra/ay145/mags.html
- For magnitudes, always remember to think about
central wavelength, band-pass and zero point.
E.g. Vega vs AB. - Surface brightness (magnitudes per square
arcsecond), like magnitudes, is logarithmic and
does not add. - Why are magnitudes still the unit of choice?
24Coordinate Systems
- 2-D Celestial Equatorial (B1950, J2000)
- (precession, fundamental
grid) - Ecliptic
- Alt-Az (observers only)
- Galactic (l b)
- Supergalactic (SGL SGB)
- 3-D Heliocentric, LSR
- Galactocentric, Local Group
- CMB Reference Frame (bad!)
25Galactic Coordinates
- Tied to MW.
- B1950 (Besselian year)
- NGP at 12h49m 27.4o
- NCP at l123o b27.4o
- J2000 (Julian year)
- NGP at 12h51m26.28s
- 27o0742.01
- NCP at l122.932o
- b27.128o
26Supergalactic Coordinates
27Supergalactic Coordinates
- Equator along supergalactic plane
- Zero point of SGL at one intersection with the
Galactic Plane - NSGP at l 47.37o, b6.32o
- J2000 18.9h 15.7o
- SGB0, SGL0 at l 137.37o b 0o
- Lahav et al 2000, MNRAS 312, 166L
28Galaxy Morphology
- Simple observable properties
- Classification goal is to relate form to physics.
- First major scheme was Hubbles Tuning Fork
Diagram - Hubbles original scheme lacked the missing link
S0 galaxies, even as late as 1936 - Ellipticity defined as
- e 10(a-b)/a 7
observationally - Hubble believe that his sequence was an
evolutionary sequence. - Hubble also thought there were very few Irr gals.
29(No Transcript)
30 - Hubble types now not considered evolutionary
although there are connnections between
morphology and evolution. - Hubble types have been considerably embellished
by Sandage, deVaucouleurs and van den Bergh,
etc. - Irr ? Im (Magellanic Irregulars)
- I0 (Peculiar galaxies)
- Sub classes have been added, S0/a, Sa, Sab, Sb
- S0 class well established (DV ? L, L0 and L-)
- Rings, mixed types and peculiarities added
- (e.g. SAbc(r)p open Sbc with inner ring
and peculiarities)
31 32(No Transcript)
33 - S. van den Bergh introduced two additional
schema - Luminosity Classes --- a galaxys appearance is
related to its intrinsic L. - Anemic Spirals --- very low surface brightness
disks that probably result from the stripping of
gas - (c.f. Nature versus Nurture debate)
- Morgan also introduced spectral typing of
galaxies as in stars a, af, f, fg, g, gk, k
34Luminosity Classes (S vdB ST Cal)
Real scatter much(!) larger
35 36 - Other embellishments of note
- Morgan et al. during the search for radio
galaxies introduced N, D, cD - Arp (1966) Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies
- Some 30 of all NGC Galaxies are in the Arp
or Vorontsov-Velyaminov atlases - Arp and the Lampost Syndrome
- Zwickys Catalogue of Compact and Post-Eruptive
Galaxies (1971)
37Surface Brightness Effects
- Arp (1965)
- WYSIWYG
- Normal galaxies
- lie in a restricted
- Range of SB
- (aka the Lampost
- Syndrome)
38By the numbers
- In a Blue selected, z0, magnitude limited
sample - 1/3 E (20) S0 (15)
- 2/3 S (60) I (5)
- Per unit volume will be different.
- also for spirals, very approximately
- 1/3 A 1/3 X 1/3 B
39 - Mix of types in any sample depends on selection
by color, surface brightness, and even density.
Note tiny fraction of Irregulars
40Quantitative Morphology
- Elliptical galaxy SB Profiles
- Hubble Law (one of four)
- I(r) I0 (1 r/r0)-2
- I0 Central Surface Brightness
- r0 Core Radius
- Problem 4 p ? I(r) r dr diverges
41 - De Vaucouleurs R ¼ Law
- (a.k.a. Sersic profile with N4)
- I(r) Ie e -7.67 ((r/re) ¼ -1)
- re effective or ½ light radius
- I e surface brightness at re
- I0 e 7.67 Ie 103.33 Ie 2100 Ie
- re 11 r0
- and this is integrable
- Sersic ln I(R) ln I0 kR1/n
42 - King profile (based on isothermal spheres fit to
Globular Clusters) adds tidal cutoff term - re r0 rt tidal radius
- I(r) IK (1 r2/rc2)-1/2 (1 rt2/rc2)-1/2
2 - And many others, e.g.
- Oemler truncated Hubble Law
- Hernquist Profile
- NFW (Navarro, Frenk White) Profile
- generally dynamically inspired
43King profiles
Rt/Rc
44 - Typical numbers
- I0 15-19 in B
- ltI0gt 17
- Giant E
- r0 1 kpc
- re 10 kpc
45 - Sersic profiles
- Small N, less centrally concentrated and steeper
at large R
46Spiral Galaxies
- Characterized by bulges exponential disks
- I(r) IS e r/rS
- Freeman (1970) IS 21.65 mB / sq arcsec
- rS 1-5 kpc, f(L)
- If Spirals have DV Law bulges and exponential
disks, can you calculate the Disk/Bulge ratio for
given rS, re, IS Ie ?
47NB on Galaxy Magnitudes
- There are MANY definitions for galaxy
magnitudes, each with its s and s - Isophotal (to a defined limit in mag/sq arcsec)
- Metric (to a defined radius in kpc)
- Petrosian
- Integrated Total etc.
- Also remember COLOR
48Reading Assignment
- For next Wednesday
- The preface to Zwickys Catalogue of Compact and
Post-Eruptive Galaxies - and NFW The Structure of Cold Dark Matter
Halos, 1996, ApJ...463..563 - Read, Outline, be prepared to discuss Zwickys
comments and Hernquists profile.
49Hubble,1926
- Investigated 400 extragalactic nebula in what he
though was a fairly complete sample. - Cook astrograph 6 refractor (!) 60
100 - Numbers increased with magnitude
- Presented classification scheme (note no S0)
- 97 regular
- Sprials closest to E have large bulges
- Some spirals are barred
50 - Es more stellar with decreasing luminosity
- mT C - K log d
- 23 E 59 SA 15 SB 3 Irr II
- (no mixed types)
- Plots of characteristics. Fall off at M12.5
- Luminosity-diameter relation
- Edge on Spirals fainter
- Apparent vs actual Ellipticity -- inclination
- Absolute mags for small with Ds
51 - Calibration of brightest stars ---future use as
distance indicators - Masses via rotation, Opiks method
- Log N - M or Log N log S
- Space Density 9 x 10-18 Neb /pc3
- 1.5 x 10-31 g/cc
- Universe Size 2.7 x 1010 pc 30000 Mpc
- Volume 3.5 x 1032 pc3
- Mass 1.8 x 10 57 g 9
x1022 M_sun