Title: Galaxies
1Galaxies
2Topics
- Galaxies and Dark Matter
- The Expanding Universe
3Island Universes
- 1924 Edwin Hubble
- Measured the distances to several galaxies using
the Luminosity-Period relationship of Cepheid
variables, discovered by Henrietta Leavitt (1912)
Hubble at the Mount Wilson Observatory
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5Galaxy Types
Elliptical
Spiral
Irregular
Peculiar
6Galactic Clusters
- Clusters
- On very large scales galaxies are found to form
clusters. - The Milky Way, in particular, inhabits a cluster
called the Local Group which contains about 30
galaxies of which the Milky Way, M31 and M33 are
the three largest.
7Local Group Contains about 30 galaxies
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_Group
8Galactic Clusters II
- SuperClusters
- On even greater scales the galaxy clusters
themselves form clusters called superclusters
that can be tens to hundreds of millions of light
years across. - These superclusters resemble huge ribbons or
sheets in space. - Between them lie great voids containing
relatively few galaxies.
9Virgo Supercluster
10Slices of the Universe
1 billion light years
You are here
11Dark Matter
12Rotation Curve of Milky Way
- Rotation Curve
- This is a plot of the orbital speed of stars,
about the galactic center, versus distance from
the center. - The speed is determined by the amount of matter
enclosed within the stars orbit.
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14Rotation Curve of Milky Way II
- How Much Mass?
- Newtons version of Keplers 3rd Law is
- If m1 gtgt m2
R
P Period of orbit v Speed of star
15Rotation Curve of Milky Way III
- How Much Mass?
- Mass enclosed in radius R
- v 200 km / sec
- R 26,000 light years
- m1 1011 Solar masses
R
P Period of orbit v Speed of star
16Rotation Curve Puzzle
- Puzzle
- Keplers Law predicts that the rotation curve
should decrease with increasing distance from the
center of gravity, like 1/vR, as is true in our
solar system. - But this law fails for stars orbiting the
galactic center.
17Rotation Curve Puzzle Possible Solutions
- Possible Solution A New Law of Gravity
- Newtons law of gravity fails on very large
scales. - Possible Solution Dark Matter
- Newtons law holds even on large scales.
- But a non-luminous form of matter must exist.
- If so, the dark matter could be new forms of
matter or dark stars, or a mixture of both.
18Dark Matter
- Sub-Stellar Objects (Failed Stars)
- Would-be stars that did not draw together enough
matter to trigger thermonuclear reactions in
their core. - These are objects with masses less than about
0.01 solar masses. They shine so feebly that they
cannot be seen from Earth. - Sub-stellar objects in our halo are referred to
as Massive Compact Halo Objects (MACHOs). - Black Holes
- One intriguing possibility is that the dark
matter may be in the form of black holes.
19Dark Matter II
- Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPS)
- These particles could be everywhere.
- If the WIMP hypothesis is correct, these
particles are traversing your body right now! - But because they interact so weakly with matter
it is unlikely that any will actually interact
with the particles in your body! - Experiments are being conducted worldwide to test
the WIMP hypothesis.
20Dark Stars Gravitational Lenses
21Dark Stars Gravitational Lenses
Dark stars have been found but not enough to
explain the missing mass.
22The Expanding Universe
- 1929 Red Shift
- Drawing on his own observations and those of
others, Edwin Hubble discovered that the red
shift, - z (lo - le) / le
- of the light from distant galaxies increases
with distance d. - le emitted wavelength
- lo observed wavelength
23The Expanding Universe II
- 1929 Hubbles Law
- Hubble assumed that the red shift is caused by
the motion of galaxies away from us. In this case
- z v / c
- His observations are summarized in
- Hubbles Law
- v H0 d
- where H0 is called Hubbles constant.
24The Expanding Universe III
- Hubbles Law
- v H0 d
- The Hubble Time
- d v t
- d H0 d t
- t 1/H0
- For H0 70 km/s / Mpc
- t 14 billion years.
1 Mpc (Mega-parsec) 3.26 x 106 light years (ly)
25The Universal Scale Factor
a(t) is the scale factor of the Universe
t is cosmic time
26How Far Is Far ?
t0 t1 is the look-back time
d0 d(t0) is the proper distance between the two
galaxies now d1 d(t1) is the proper distance
between the two galaxies then