A1143 Quiz 4 Distribution of Grades: No Curve. Milky Way: Bright Band Across Sky (Resolved by Galileo)

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A1143 Quiz 4 Distribution of Grades: No Curve

Milky Way: Bright Band Across Sky (Resolved by Galileo)

Milky Way: Galactic Structure and Dynamics Milky Way has spiral structure Galactic Bulge surrounds the Center Powerful radio source Sagittarius A at Center Contains Super-Massive Black Hole M(SMBH) ~ 10 6 M(Sun)

Milky Way: Galactic Structure

Our Galaxy – Milky Way Spiral galaxy, e.g. Milky way, Andromeda Sun is located in the disk, but far away from the center, about 8000 parsecs (1 pc = 3.28 LY) MW appears as a bright band across the sky Determine the size of the galaxy from RR Lyrae stars in globular clusters that lie above the plane of the galaxy (a globular cluster has about a million stars) Period-Luminosity relation for Cepheid variables and RR Lyrae gives the magnitude M of absolute luminosity L Distance modulus relation relates the magnitude m of the apparent luminosity to distance d at 10 pc m – M = 5 log (d/10)

Galaxies: Structure of the Universe Galaxy Types and Structures Shapley-Curtis debate at the turn of 20 th century: Are ther other galaxies like our own Milky Way? Galaxies appear as small globules, like globular cluster of old stars in our galaxy Harlow Shapley – NO, only other globular cluster of stars Heber Curtis – YES, other galaxies like ‘ island universes ’ Hubble settled the debate by measuring the large distances to other galaxies using bright Cepheid stars

Galactic Dynamics Nearest comparable cluster to the Local Group is the Virgo Cluster at about ~ 18 Mpc, size ~ 2 Mpc, ~ 2500 galaxies (mostly dwarfs), Mass ~ 100 trillion times M(Sun) Galaxies are large compared to distance within a group; most galaxies within a group are separated by only ~ 20 times their diameter (by comparison most stars are separated by 10 million times the diameter) Tidal interactions, collisions, cannibalization, splash encounters, starbursts, mergers, etc. The MW and Andromeda are moving towards each other at ~120 Km/sec, and might have a close encounter in ~3-4 Gyr; tidal distortion and merger after 1-2 Gyr Eventually only one galaxy might remain, most likely a medium-sized Elliptical

The Local Group of Galaxies Andromeda (M31 or NGC 188)

Local Group of Galaxies Around Milky Way

Twin galaxies: Spiral and Dwarf Whirlpool Galaxy disintegrates its small neighbor

Mult-wavelength Far-Infrared map of M81 Bode’s Galaxy 12 million Lys Ursa Major constellation

Andromeda (M31 or NGC 188)

Variety of Spiral Galaxies

Barred Spirals: Powered by Rotating Jets

Elliptical Galaxies

Types of Galaxies Spirals – nucleus, bulge, halo, spiral arms Barred Spirals – barred nucleus, ….. ” ….. Ellipticals – various kinds of ellipticity, from near- circular E0 to highly oval and flat E7 (need to distinguish from edge-on view) – no disks, spiral arms, or dust lanes Irregulars – Not like spirals or ellipticals Hubble Classification – Tuning Fork Diagram

Barred Spirals Ellipticals Ordinary Spirals

Hubble Classification of Galaxies Ordinary Spirals – classified according to relative bulge strength and tightness of spiral arms - Sa: prominent bulge and tight but indistinct arms - Sb: less prominent bulge and looser arm structure - Sc: small bulge and loose and clearly seen arms i.e. from Sa to Sc, from tight to unwinding arms Barred Spirals – bar-shaped nucleus (jet??); as many as ordinary spirals; bar rotates like solid; spiral arms emerge from either end (SBa, SBb, SBc) Ellipticals: No arms or dust lanes; old stars Irregulars – chaotic structure, no systematic rotation, many dwarf irregular galaxies (classified as “ dI ” )

New Galaxy (General) Catalog (NGC)

Collision of Galaxies Galaxy-galaxy collision can induce gravitational tidal effects and lead to “ starbursts ” – rapid stellar formation

Colliding Galaxies (Simulations)

Properties of Galaxies

Stellar Birthrate: Ellipticals have older stars than spirals No significant star formation after 1 billion years Ongoing star formation

Multiple images by gravitational lensing

Gravitational Lensing and Multiple Images

Gravitational lensing of a quasar – two images a,b