Galaxies Chapter 16. Topics Types of galaxies Dark Matter Distances to galaxies Speed of galaxies...
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Transcript of Galaxies Chapter 16. Topics Types of galaxies Dark Matter Distances to galaxies Speed of galaxies...
Topics
• Types of galaxies
• Dark Matter
• Distances to galaxies
• Speed of galaxies
• Expansion of the universe and Hubble’s law
You’re one in a million(or billion, or trillion)!
• Our Sun is part of a group of stars (galaxy) called the Milky Way.
• Are we the only galaxy?• As of the 1920s, the answer was “yes”• Now, the answer is an emphatic “no”• A Hubble Deep Field image of only one 30
millionth of the sky showed thousands of visible galaxies (that means that an image of the entire sky, if possible, would shown hundreds of billions of galaxies).
Spiral• bulge in the middle
• halo, disc, arms
• old stars dominate the bulge
• young stars dominate the arms
Lenticular
• disk (like a spiral)• no arms (like an
elliptical)• little gas and dust
(like an elliptical)• old stars
Irregular• Probably a result
of gravitational interaction of a galaxy with another galaxy
• Small and Large Magellanic Clouds orbit the Milky Way
Clusters and Superclusters
• Galaxies are found in binaries or larger groups
• Milky Way has two companions, the LMC and SMC
• Andromeda has two satellite galaxies
• Virgo cluster contains about 1,000 galaxies
Virgo Cluster
Where’s the mass?• calculations of mass in galaxies do
not match the mass of observed stars and gas
• there is unobserved mass--dark matter
• what could it be?– planets?– brown dwarfs?– faint white dwarfs?– neutron stars?– neutrinos?– undiscovered particles?
• one of the great mysteries of astronomy
Measuring the distance to galaxies
• Cepheid stars have variable brightness– Period depends on luminosity; the larger the period, the
greater the luminosity– Use luminosity and measured brightness to determine
distance– Edwin Hubble, in 1924, determined that these spiral nebulae
were indeed distant galaxies
• Peak brightness of Type Ia supernovae– assume that peak luminosity is the same for all Type Ia
supernovae– use supernovae in galaxies of known distance to calculate
peak luminosity
The universe is expanding!
• Measure distance to galaxies• Measure recessional speed of galaxies
– by analyzing the doppler shift of emission spectra from the galaxies– spectra are redshifted - galaxies are moving away from us!
• Galaxies at greater distances are moving faster– Hubble law
• By determining the Hubble constant, we can calculate approximate distances to the most distant galaxies.
• Determining the Hubble constant is the hard part due to uncertainty in distance data– between 50 and 80 km/s/Mpc