Title: Charles Hakes
1(No Transcript)
2(No Transcript)
3Chapter 15-16
- The Milky Way
- Dark Matter
- Extending the Distance Scale
4Mapping the Milky Way
5Spiral Galaxies
- A view of spiral galaxies from face-on and
edge-on.
6Figure 14.1Galactic Plane
7Mapping the Milky Way
- Radio observations can determine much of the
structure and rotation rates.
8Mapping the Milky Way
- Radio observations can determine much of the
structure and rotation rates. - Orderly rotation in the plane.
- Random orbits in the halo.
9Figure 14.12Stellar Orbits in Our Galaxy
10Figure 14.10Observations of the Galactic Disk
11Mass of the Milky Way
- Recall Newtons modification to Keplers third
law
12Figure 14.18Galaxy Rotation Curve
13Mass of the Milky Way
- There is apparently more mass than can be seen.
- Unseen mass out to 50 kpc.
- Recall radius of observable Milky Way is 15
kpc. - Dark Matter
- Can detect gravitational effects
- Cannot detect any other way.
14Dark Matter
- Is not atomic or molecular clouds - we would
detect those using spectroscopy. - Could be brown dwarfs or white dwarfs - very
difficult to see. - MACHOs - MAssive Compact Halo Objects
- Could be exotic subatomic particles
- WIMPs - Weakly Interacting Massive Particles
15Figure 14.19Gravitational Lensing
16What observations suggest the mass of the Galaxy
goes much farther out than its visible disc?
- A) the orbits of the open clusters in the disc
- B) x-ray images of other galaxies' discs from
Chandra - C) the rotation curve beyond 15kpc
- D) 21 cm maps of the spiral arms
- E) infrared observations of distant brown dwarfs
17What observations suggest the mass of the Galaxy
goes much farther out than its visible disc?
- A) the orbits of the open clusters in the disc
- B) x-ray images of other galaxies' discs from
Chandra - C) the rotation curve beyond 15kpc
- D) 21 cm maps of the spiral arms
- E) infrared observations of distant brown dwarfs
18Galaxy Masses
19Figure 16.4Galaxy Rotation Curves
20Galaxy Masses
- Galaxy masses determined from Newtons
modification to Keplers third law. - Within the visible spiral, radial velocities (and
masses) can be measured directly. - Outside the visible spiral, observe multiple
galaxy systems. - Only radial velocity determined with Doppler
shift. - Reliable statistical information from lots of
observation.
21Figure 16.5Galaxy Masses
- from Newtons modification of Keplers law
22Galaxy Masses
- Galaxies apparently have invisible halos similar
to the Milky Way. - All contain 3-10 times the visible mass.
- Mass discrepancy is even greater for clusters of
galaxies.
23Figure 16.6Dark Galaxy?
24Figure 16.7abGalaxy Cluster X-Ray Emission
- Intergalactic space is filled with superheated
gas in this cluster.
25Figure 16.7cGalaxy Cluster X-Ray Emission
26Figure 16.8HeadTail Radio Galaxy - Could this
be a wake through intergalactic clouds?
27Extending the Distance Scale
- Variable Stars
- Tully-Fisher Relationship
- Supernovae
- Cosmological Redshift
28Figure 14.7Variable Stars on Distance Ladder
- Greater distances can be determined than
typically available through spectroscopic
parallax, because these variables are so bright.
29Figure 15.12Local Group
30Tully-Fisher Relationship
31Figure 15.9Galactic Tuning Fork
- Galaxies are classified according to their shape
(Hubble classification) - Elliptical
- Spiral
- Irregular
32Figure 15.10Galaxy Rotation
- Rotation rates can be determined using Doppler
shift measurements - Blue shift indicates moving towards you
- Red shift indicates moving away from you
33Tully-Fisher Relationship
- Rotation speed can be used to determine a
galaxys total mass. - A close correlation between rotation speed and
total luminosity has been observed. - Comparing (true) luminosity to (observed)
apparent brightness allows us to determine
distance - Distance scale can be extended to 200 Mpc.
34Figure 15.11Extragalactic Distance Ladder
35Supernovae
- Type II Supernovae
- Are a result of a very massive stars core
collapse - Can vary in brightness, since the cores can vary
in size. - Therefore, they are not a good distance
indicator.
36Supernovae
- Type I Supernovae
- White dwarf, carbon detonation
- Are a result of a white dwarf exceeding its
Chandrasekhar limit (1.4 Msolar). - They are all about the same size.
- They are very good distance indicators (Standard
Candles).
37Standard Candles
- Standard Candles are easily recognizable
astronomical objects whose luminosities are
confidently known. - Term usually only refers to very luminous objects
- Type I supernovae
- Other objects might include
- Rotating spiral galaxies
- Cepheid variables
- Main sequence stars
38Figure 15.11Extragalactic Distance Ladder
39Review Questions
40Which of these does not exist?
- A) a .06 solar mass brown dwarf
- B) a 1.3 solar mass white dwarf
- C) a six solar mass black hole
- D) a million solar mass black hole
- E) a 3.3 solar mass neutron star
41Which of these does not exist?
- A) a .06 solar mass brown dwarf
- B) a 1.3 solar mass white dwarf
- C) a six solar mass black hole
- D) a million solar mass black hole
- E) a 3.3 solar mass neutron star
42A star has an apparent magnitude of 1.0 and an
absolute magnitude of 1.0. If the distance
between Earth and the star increases, the
apparent magnitude would _____, and the absolute
magnitude would _____.
- A) increase decrease
- B) decrease increase
- C) increase not change
- D) decrease not change
- E) not change increase
43A star has an apparent magnitude of 1.0 and an
absolute magnitude of 1.0. If the distance
between Earth and the star increases, the
apparent magnitude would _____, and the absolute
magnitude would _____.
- A) increase decrease
- B) decrease increase
- C) increase not change
- D) decrease not change
- E) not change increase
44A star has apparent magnitude of 8.0 before it
goes nova and increases its luminosity by 10,000
times. Its apparent magnitude after it goes nova
is.
- A) 8.0
- B) 18.0
- C) -8.0
- D) -2.0
- E) 3.0
45A star has apparent magnitude of 8.0 before it
goes nova and increases its luminosity by 10,000
times. Its apparent magnitude after it goes nova
is.
- A) 8.0
- B) 18.0
- C) -8.0
- D) -2.0
- E) 3.0
46Using spectroscopic parallax, you find a stars
distance to be 76 parsecs. You now find out that
the star isnt a main sequence star, but is a red
giant. Your distance estimate is
- A) too large
- B) too small
- C) fine - no significant change in estimate is
needed.
47Using spectroscopic parallax, you find a stars
distance to be 76 parsecs. You now find out that
the star isnt a main sequence star, but is a red
giant. Your distance estimate is
- A) too large
- B) too small
- C) fine - no significant change in estimate is
needed.
48Which is correct?
- 1 - The new moon rises at noon.
- 2 - The first quarter moon rises at noon.
- 3 - The full moon rises at noon.
- 4 - The third quarter moon rises at noon.
49Which is correct?
- 1 - The new moon rises at noon.
- 2 - The first quarter moon rises at noon.
- 3 - The full moon rises at noon.
- 4 - The third quarter moon rises at noon.
50In Paris, France (50 degrees north latitude),
what is the longest day of the year?
- 1 March 21
- 2 June 21
- 3 September 21
- 4 December 21
51In Paris, France (50 degrees north latitude),
what is the longest day of the year?
- 1 March 21
- 2 June 21
- 3 September 21
- 4 December 21
52Where along the horizon does the Sun rise on June
21 in Paris, France?
- 1 Due east
- 2 North of east
- 3 South of east
- 4 Cant tell with information given
53Where along the horizon does the Sun rise on June
21 in Paris, France?
- 1 Due east
- 2 North of east
- 3 South of east
- 4 Cant tell with information given
54Three Minute Paper
- Write 1-3 sentences.
- What was the most important thing you learned
today? - What questions do you still have about todays
topics?