Title: Nubecula Major
1Nubecula Major
2Outline
- Basic Facts
- Discovery
- Morphology
- Its place in the Local Group
- Relation to the Small Magellanic Clouds
- As compared to other galaxies
- The Past and Future of the LMC
- Dark Nebulae
- Terminal spiral into Milky Way
- What weve learned from the LMC
- Star-forming regions
- Spiral Nebula
- Superbubbles!
- 30 Doradus
- SN 1987a
- Where SN1987a is
3History of the LMC
Discovered even earlier by everyone who lived in
the southern hemisphere
Discovered in 1519 by Ferdinand Magellan
Discovered in 964 by Abd-Al-Rahman Al Sufi
Discovered in 1503 by Amerigo Vespucci
4Basic Facts
- 50 kpc distant in the constellation Dorado
- Tidal radius 15 4.5 kpc (van der Marel et al.
2002, ApJ 124, 2639) - Actual distance is not known (despite supernova
studies) because the LMC is thick.
- Actual distance is not known (despite supernova
studies) because the LMC has depth.
Wei-Hao Wang (IfA, U. Hawaii)
5Basic Facts
- Third closest galaxy to the Milky Way (thus
discovered)
Canis Major Dwarf Elliptical 25 kly
Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical
Large Magellanic Cloud
Small Magellanic Cloud
6Basic Facts
- Fourth most massive galaxy in the Local Group
M31 Andromeda 3.1x1011
Milky Way 1.3x1011
M33 Triangulum 3.9x109
LMC 6x109
M32
NGC 6822 1.4x109
NGC 205
SMC 1.5x109
Harwit, M. Astrophysical Concepts. 3rd ed.
Springer-Verlag 1998
7Things we can do with the LMC
- Calibrate Distance scales (Hubble 1925, Obs, 48,
139H ) - Find the age of the universe
- Study stellar evolution from a top down
perspective - Find Dark Matter between the LMC and us
(microlensing) - Constrain the size of the Milky Way dark halo
- Study supernova evolution
- Study ISM from a top down perspective
- Give seminar presentations
- Develop galaxy formation models
- Develop galactic chemical evolution models
- Find more massive and rare stars
8Obligatory
9Morphology
- Often considered irregular
- Prototype SBm barred Magellanic Type spiral
Mediocre Design
10Morphology
- The LMC has globular clusters of its own, in
disk-like orbits (reason unknown)
11The Brothers Magellanic
The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds are
interacting with each other (but not actually
bound to each other). The Magellanic stream
contains 630106 Msun of gas. (Brüns et al. 2005
AA, 432, 45)
The Parkes HI telescope Brüns et al. 2005 (AA,
432, 45)
12The Eventual Fate of the LMC
- Slowly spiraling into Milky Way
- According to Mastropietro et al. (2005, MNRAS
363, 509) the LMC has lost its dark matter halo
already - Has lost large quantities of gas
Mastropietro et al. 2005, MNRAS 363, 509
13The Eventual fate of the LMC
- Mastropietro et al. assume the LMC started as a
small spiral galaxy - Arms form naturally from the tidal forces and
gas/halo ram pressure
14The Eventual Fate of the LMC
- Final state of the simulation results in a ring
of matter around the Milky Way - Simulation intentionally ignores SMC
- Simulation ignores the potential collision with
Andromeda 3-4 Gyr from now
15Stars Those pretty pointy things
- Despite tidal and gravitational forces, the LMC
has plenty of gas - Was a dark galaxy until relatively recently-
few if any clusters between 4 and 10 Gyr old (van
den Bergh 2000 PASP 112, 529)
DEM L 130a (LMC N119) (NGC 1910) An
honest-to-goodness spiral nebula SuperCOSMOS Red
plate
16OB associations in the LMC
- Difficult to date
- The LMC is uniformly low metallicity, so Pop I
and Pop II are irrelevant
The SN1987a OB association Blue gt6Msun,
Green2-6Msun, Redlt2Msun http//heritage.stsci.e
du/1999/04/nino/nino_ctr.html
1730 Doradus (Tarantula Nebula)
280 parsecs
9 parsecs
Orion Nebula (M42) NASA,ESA, M. Robberto (Space
Telescope Science Institute/ESA)
1830 Doradus King of the Star Forming Regions
HST, John Trauger (JPL), James Westphal
(Caltech), Nolan Walborn (STScl), Rodolfo Barba'
(La Plata Observatory), NASA
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21How we can see Superbubbles
- Holes in HI, shells of HII (fainter as you go
outward) - Purple is Ha, Cyan is OIII.
350 ly
Superbubble N44 Gemini Observatory GMOS
Image/Travis Rector - University of Alaska
Anchorage
22SN 1987a (1997) Hubble Heritage Team
(AURA/STScI/NASA/ESA)
SN 1987a (2006) NASA, ESA, P. Challis R.
Kirshner (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics)