GALAXIES, GALAXIES, GALAXIES! A dime a dozen… just one of a 100,000,000,000! 1.Galaxy Classification Ellipticals Dwarf Ellipticals Spirals Barred Spirals.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL Revision Lecture.
Advertisements

Galaxy Classification
Galaxies.
Galaxy Classification
Week 8 Galaxies Reading: Chapter 15, Sections 1, 3 (9 pages)
Galaxies. The Hubble Tuning-Fork Diagram This is the traditional scheme for classifying galaxies:
The Universe of Galaxies. A Brief History Galileo.
What is a Galaxy? A galaxy is made of billions of stars, dust, and gas all held together by gravity.A galaxy is made of billions of stars, dust, and gas.
The Milky Way Galaxy part 2
AST 101 The Realm of the Nebulae. Meet the Neighbors.
Galaxies Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 20.
Galaxies. First spiral nebulae found in 1845 by the Earl of Rosse. Speculated it was beyond our Galaxy "Great Debate" between Shapley and Curtis.
Galaxies PHYS390 Astrophysics Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 20.
GALAXIES, GALAXIES, GALAXIES! A dime a dozen… just one of a 100,000,000,000! 1.Galaxy Classification Ellipticals Dwarf Ellipticals Spirals Barred Spirals.
GALAXIES? So you want to know more about. Types of Galaxies.
Susan CartwrightOur Evolving Universe1 Other galaxies n Telescopic images of the night sky reveal many other galaxies l l What do they look like?   are.
TYPES OF GALAXIES. Edwin Hubble Early 1900’s: astronomers determined that galaxies appear in a low number of shapes Hubble (1920s): developed a classification.
Galaxy Classification. Edwin Hubble was the first person to establish the distances to other galaxies. Edwin Hubble was the first person to establish.
Formation of Galaxies Types of Galaxies
A1143 Quiz 4 Distribution of Grades: No Curve. Milky Way: Bright Band Across Sky (Resolved by Galileo)
Chapter 24 Normal and Active Galaxies. The light we receive tonight from the most distant galaxies was emitted long before Earth existed.
Galaxies Chapter 16. Galaxies Star systems like our Milky Way Contain a few thousand to tens of billions of stars. Large variety of shapes and sizes.
Galaxies Chapter 13:. Galaxies Contain a few thousand to tens of billions of stars, Large variety of shapes and sizes Star systems like our Milky Way.
Another galaxy: NGC The Milky Way roughly resembles it.
The Universe Looking at Galaxies. The Universe Early in the history of the universe, hydrogen and helium (and other forms of matter) clumped together.
NOTES: Characteristics of Galaxies Classification: The Hubble Tuning Fork Elliptical: E0--E7 Spheroids, E0 is spherical, E7 least spherical. Population.
Galaxies.
GALAXIES These are galaxy clusters and separate galaxies taken by long-range telescope. The area of the sky covered is less than the diameter of the moon.
© 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley A Universe of Galaxies.
Galaxies and the UNIVERSE.
The Milky Way Appears as a band of light stretching across the sky There are dark regions along the band, giving the appearance of a lack of stars This.
Historical background Until the 1920's it was believed that our Milky Way was all there was to the universe. As early as the 18th century, the philosopher.
Galaxies Please press “1” to test your transmitter.
Galaxies. A galaxy is a large group of stars, dust, and gases. They come in variable sizes and shapes. The largest have over a trillion stars.
1 Galaxies The Andromeda Galaxy - nearest galaxy similar to our own. Only 2 million light years away! Galaxies are clouds of millions to hundreds of billions.
Galaxies Astronomy 115. First, which of the following is a galaxy? Open cluster Globular cluster Nebula Interstellar medium (gas and dust) Supernova remnant.
GALAXIES. There are Three main classes (as classified by Hubble). A. Spiral B. Elliptical C. Irregular 1. Spiral galaxies. Disk + central bulge. M51 M51.
Galaxies Stellar Neighborhoods. What are Galaxies? Galaxies are –Huge –Held together by gravity –Comprised of… Stars Objects that orbit those stars The.
Galaxy Classification Image Credit: NASA. Theory Presentation The aim of this project will be to introduce students to the concept of varying galactic.
Galaxies. A galaxy is made of billions of stars, dust, and gas all held together by gravity. Galaxies are scattered throughout the Universe. They vary.
Introduction to Galaxies 5/23/2013. BR: Milky Way Scale The Milky Way has a diameter of approximately 8.25 x 10 9 AU (8.25 billion AU). 206,265 AU = 3.26.
Galaxies.
“OUR GALAXY” Definition of a Galaxy: a huge group of individual stars, star clusters, dust, and gas bound together by gravity.
10.2 Galaxies Galaxies are a collection of stars, gas and dust held together by gravity Our star, the sun, is one of 100 million stars in the Milky Way.
GALAXIES, GALAXIES, GALAXIES! A dime a dozen… just one of a 100,000,000,000! 1.Galaxy Classification Ellipticals Dwarf Ellipticals Spirals Barred Spirals.
Galaxies. The Hubble Tuning-Fork Diagram This is the traditional scheme for classifying galaxies:
Galaxies. Edwin Hubble ( ) Discovered that the universe goes beyond the Milky Way He was the first person to establish the distances to other.
Galaxies.
Galaxies.
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field, or HUDF, catalogs thousands of galaxies in a small section of space in the southern constellation Fornax. Previous versions.
Galaxies Star systems like our Milky Way
Galaxies.
Types & Hubble’s Classification Scheme
Galaxies.
Galaxies.
GALAXIES, GALAXIES, GALAXIES!
Notes: Galaxies.
Galaxies Chapter 30 Section 3.
Galaxy Classification
Galaxies.
Galaxies And the Foundation of Modern Cosmology
Galaxies.
The Universe.
Galaxies.
Galaxies.
Galaxy Classification
Galaxies.
Galaxies.
Presentation transcript:

GALAXIES, GALAXIES, GALAXIES! A dime a dozen… just one of a 100,000,000,000! 1.Galaxy Classification Ellipticals Dwarf Ellipticals Spirals Barred Spirals Irregulars 2.Measuring Properties of Galaxies Distances Sizes Luminosities Masses Dark Matter?

The Hubble Deep Field The longest, deepest exposure ever taken. Was an empty piece of sky! From this image, we can estimate the number of galaxies in the universe! 1.Count the number of galaxies in this image 2.Measure angular area on the sky of this image 3.Figure out how many images of this size needed to cover entire sky 4.Multiply that number (from 3.) by the number of galaxies in this image (from 1.)

Galaxies are the Fundamental “Ecosystems” of the Universe are cosmic engines that turn gas into stars and stars into gas between them no star formation occurs; “nothing happens” in intergalactic space are recent discovery (by Edwin Hubble in late 1920’s) can be classified my morphology (shapes and sizes) Three Main Types of Galaxies: Ellipticals - galaxies are pure bulge, no disk component Spirals - galaxies contain varying amounts of disk component from mostly bulge with barely detectable disks to those totally dominated by their disks Irregulars - galaxies are… well. Odd.

Elliptical Spiral Irregular Examples of Three Main Morphological Galaxy Types The Hubble Tuning Fork

Elliptical Galaxies Names of E galaxies give their shape. E0 is round. E6 is elongated. The way you name an E galaxy is to measure its “major” and “minor” axis and plug it into the formula above. An Example of an E0 galaxy. The bright objects surrounding it are its own globular clusters. Elliptical galaxies are affectionately called “E” galaxies. They can be extremely large and massive. This galaxy is 2 million light years across. The size of the Milky Way in comparison!

More E Galaxies Here is an example of an E6 galaxy. Note how well it fits the definition of an E6. Note that it has smooth brightness profile, that there are no features due to dust and gas. Note how this little formula is used simply by looking at the photograph. We use computers to make these measurements. Many E galaxies reside in center of groups or clusters of galaxies. Note the E0 (to the right) and the E3 near the center of the cluster.

Spiral Galaxies Spirals are classified by their relative amount of disk and bulge components. We designate these Sa, Sb, Sc, in order of decreasing bulge to disk ratio. More bulge More disk Barred spirals are called SBa, SBb, SBc More disk means more star formation!