Title: Galaxies
1Galaxies
2What is a galaxy?
Examples of galaxies
3It took centuries for astronomers to deduce the
true nature of galaxies.
Whirlpool Galaxy as seen with telescope (Rosse,
AD 1845)
Andromeda Galaxy as seen by naked eye (Al
Sufi, AD 964)
4What is a galaxy?
A gravitationally bound assembly of
many stars ( associated planets)
interstellar gas ( dust)
and dark matter.
many 10 million
5The Milky Way Galaxy (our galaxy!) is surrounded
by orbiting dwarf galaxies.
6The dwarf galaxies (even distant ones) are
orbiting rapidly.
This shows that our dark halo is (1)
massive (2) large in radius.
Andromeda
7500,000 parsecs
50,000 parsecs
Luminous galaxy
Dark halo
8Luminous part of a galaxy (made of electrons,
protons, neutrons) is much smaller than the
dark part (made of Weakly Interacting
Massive Particles).
Whats special about electrons,
protons, neutrons that concentrates them at
the center of dark halos?
9Tootsie pop hypothesis central luminous
galaxy forms 1st, then is dipped in dark matter.
Twinkie hypothesis outer dark halo forms 1st,
then luminous galaxy is injected.
10During the first years of the universe,
Dark matter (WIMPs) ordinary matter (electrons,
protons, neutrons) were mixed together.
What can ordinary matter do that dark matter
cannot?
Emit light!
11Consider a gas of electrons, protons, helium
nuclei, and WIMPs all mixed together
e
e
e
e
e
and all moving in random directions.
e
12Initially, the particles move rapidly. They have
a high temperature
e
e
e
e
e
and therefore a high pressure.
e
13However, the ordinary particles emit photons,
which carry away energy
e
e
e
e
e
so ordinary particles (but not WIMPs) slow
down. .
e
14Ordinary particles, no longer supported by
pressure, flow where gravity takes them
e
e
e
e
e
to the densest clumps of dark matter
e
15Astronomy jargon falling down the
gravity well
Since ordinary stuff, made
of electrons, protons, neutrons, can
easily dump its excess energy, it
falls toward dense regions.
16Modified Twinkie Hypothesis originally (dark
matter) sponge cake (ordinary matter) creme
filling coexist.
Gravity injects the ordinary matter to the
center of the dark matter.
17Computer simulation of galaxy formation ordinary
matter on left, dark matter on right.
small box eventual size of galaxy
18We expect luminous ordinary matter (which loses
energy by radiating light) to form denser
knots than dark matter.
19Galaxies have been seen that have a redshift z
10.
The light we see from these galaxies was emitted
at t 500 million years.
20The time from t 350 thousand years to t 500
million years is known as the Dark Ages (no
galaxies yet).
From t 500 million years to t NOW is the Age
of Galaxies.
21All we can see of a galaxy is the luminous part
(duh!)
dwarf galaxy
giant galaxy
22Galaxies have a range of luminosities. (Milky Way
Galaxy, with a luminosity of 1011 Suns, is a
bright galaxy.)
Very few galaxies are brighter than twice the
Milky Ways luminosity.
Why is there an upper limit on the size of
galaxies?
23Why is there an upper limit on the size of land
animals?
Animals bigger than 200 tons cant support their
own weight still be flexible enough to move.
24Why is there an upper limit on the size of
superclusters?
Dense regions more than 50 Mpc across havent had
time to collapse.
25Why is there an upper limit on the size of
galaxies?
Coma Cluster of galaxies
Bigger clumps of gas havent had time to cool
down.
26It takes time for an object to cool off by
radiating away photons.
A huge turkey cools off more slowly than a small
french fry.
27It takes time for an object to cool off by
radiating away photons.
A huge gas cloud cools off more slowly than a
small gas cloud.
28Bright galaxies tend to have one of two shapes.
1) Spiral galaxies, like the Milky Way Galaxy and
the Andromeda Galaxy
29Stars in a spiral galaxy go around on neat
(almost) circular orbits.
302) Elliptical galaxies, like the galaxy known as
M87.
Spiral galaxies are more photogenic, so they
appear in all the coffee table books.
31Stars in an elliptical galaxy are on disordered,
randomly oriented orbits.
32Spiral galaxy stars are good citizens,
traveling on orderly orbits, all moving in the
same direction.
Elliptical galaxy stars are individualists,
traveling on chaotic orbits, all in different
directions.
33Why are some galaxies orderly (spiral) others
chaotic (elliptical)?
Lets see what happens when the Milky Way and
Andromeda galaxies collide.
34When 2 orderly spiral galaxies collide, they
become a chaotic elliptical galaxy.
(When 2 orderly cars collide, they dont become
an orderly truck they become a chaotic heap of
metal.)
35Spiral galaxies exist mainly in lower-density
regions (such as the Local Group).
36Elliptical galaxies exist mainly in high-density
clusters (such as the Coma
Cluster).
37Thursdays Lecture
Formation and Evolution of Stars
Reading
none