Lecture 12: Unveiling the Milky Way Astronomy 1143 – Spring 2014.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Astro1010-lee.com UVU Survey of Astronomy Chapter 21 Our Milky Way.
Advertisements

Chapter 21: The Milky Way. William Herschel’s map of the Milky Way based on star counts In the early 1800’s William Herschel, the man who discovered the.
Announcements Test this week (all about stars) Turn in Homework 11 today Pick up Homework 12 Questions on last 3 assignments? Second project is due December.
Astro 10-Lecture 13: Quiz 1. T/F We are near the center of our Galaxy 2.Cepheid variable stars can be used as distance indicators because a) They all have.
ASTR Fall Semester Joel E. Tohline, Alumni Professor Office: 247 Nicholson Hall [Slides from Lecture19]
Galaxies and the Universe
The extragalactic universe and distance measurements Discovery of the extragalactic universe The cosmic distance ladder.
Structure of the Universe Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 21 “The Universe -- Size: Bigger than the biggest thing ever and then some. Much.
Structure of the Universe Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 23.
The Milky Way Galaxy This is what our Galaxy would look like if we were looking at it from another galaxy. sun.
22 March 2005AST 2010: Chapter 18 1 Celestial Distances.
Chapter 14: The Milky Way Galaxy. Even our unaided eyes tell us that we live in some kind of disk structure. We see the Milky Way in the summer time as.
Distances. Parallax Near objects appear to move more than far objects against a distant horizon. Trigonometric parallax is used to measure distance to.
February 14, 2006 Astronomy Chapter 18: Celestial Distances A Galaxy 150 Million Light Years From Earth.
Summary Of the Structure of the Milky Way The following graphical data is meant to help you understand WHY astronomers believe they know the structure.
9B The Milky Way Our Galactic Home. 9B 9B Goals Structure of our Galaxy. Its size and shape. How do stars and things move through it? Mass and Dark Matter.
The Milky Way Center, Shape Globular cluster system
Chapter 31 Galaxies & the Universe Review & Recap It does this by precisely measuring the speed of gas and stars around a black hole. This provides clues.
The Milky Way. The Milky Way: Our Home Galaxy What are the different components of the Milky Way? How do we see those components? What does a map of each.
Galaxies How big is the Universe? Types of galaxies Elliptical Spiral
The Milky Way Galaxy. The Milky Way We see a band of faint light running around the entire sky. Galileo discovered it was composed of many stars. With.
Chapter 12. Final Exam Update Dec. 11 th,2013 Three parts: Part I : test SLO 5 questions. Part II: test SLO 5 questions Part III: Ch. 10,11,12,13,14.
The Milky Way Galaxy Shape & Size Structure & Contents Stellar Populations Gas & Dust Motion of Stars & Gas The Galactic Center Formation.
Review: The life of Stars. Variable Stars Eclipsing binaries (stars do not change physically, only their relative position changes) Nova (two stars “collaborating”
PHYS 205 Galaxies Where we live: Milkyway Galaxy Orion Arm System of Sol Third Planet.
Reddening and Extinction The discovery of the dust is relatively recent. In 1930 R.J. Trumpler (lived ) plotted the angular diameter of star.
Chapter 23 The Milky Way Galaxy.
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.
Announcements Exam 4 is Monday May 4. Tentatively will cover Chapters 9, 10, 11 & 12 (maybe) Sample questions will be posted soon Project Presentations.
Susan CartwrightOur Evolving Universe1 The Milky Way n From a dark site the Milky Way can be seen as a broad band across the sky l l What is it?   telescopes.
Chapter 16 The Milky Way Galaxy 16.1 Overview n How many stars are in the Milky Way? – About 200 billion n How many galaxies are there? – billions.
The Nature of Galaxies Chapter 17. Other Galaxies External to Milky Way –established by Edwin Hubble –used Cepheid variables to measure distance M31 (Andromeda.
A105 Stars and Galaxies  This week’s units: 74, 75, 76, 78, 79  News Quiz Today  Galaxies homework due Thursday  Projects due Nov. 30 Today’s APODAPOD.
How Far Away Are The Stars?. Distances in the Solar System Kepler’s Third Law relates period and distance Defines a relative distance scale One accurate.
Physical properties. Review Question What are the three ways we have of determining a stars temperature?
Variable Stars & The Milky Way
Chapter 14 The Milky Way Galaxy What do you think? Where in the Milky Way is the solar system located? How fast is the Sun moving in the Milky Way? How.
The Milky Way – A Classic Spiral Galaxy Here’s the mystery story we’ll unfold… Fuzzy blobs in the sky – new solar systems, or “galaxies”? Observational.
Announcements HW #2 due on Friday Color version of Prob 8, clickable links to the Youtube videos available on Carmen Please turn off all electronic devices.
Studying for EXAM III On Sun and Stars Many chapters in book, which has way too many details  lecture notes Focus on the general, repeating features Emphasis.
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 7th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 23.
ASTRO 101 Principles of Astronomy. Instructor: Jerome A. Orosz (rhymes with “boris”) Contact: Telephone:
1 The Milky Way Galaxy We live on the quiet outskirts of a galaxy of approximately 100 Billion stars. This galaxy, the Milky Way, is roughly disk-shaped.
Astronomy 404/CSI 769 Extragalactic Astronomy
The Milky Way Galaxy. Sky Maps in Different Bands.
UNIT 1 The Milky Way Galaxy.
(there’s no place like home) The Milky Way Galaxy.
Announcements HW #1 will be returned on Wednesday Problem #7 – I wrote the distance incorrectly, should have been x1019 km. But don’t change your.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Clicker Questions Chapter 14 The Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Milky Way Galaxy. The Milky Way Almost everything we see in the night sky belongs to the Milky Way. We see most of the Milky Way as a faint band of.
Galaxies I AST 112. The Universe Is the Universe contained entirely within the Milky Way?
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 14 The Milky Way Galaxy Lecture Outline.
Universe Tenth Edition
Milky Way: Galactic Structure and Dynamics Milky Way has spiral structure Galactic Bulge surrounds the Center Powerful radio source Sagittarius A at Center.
H205 Cosmic Origins  Today: Galaxies (Ch. 20)  Wednesday: Galaxy Evolution (Ch. 21)  EP 4 & Reflection 1 on Wednesday APOD.
Nov 19, 2003Astronomy 100 Fall 2003 Next week is Thanksgiving Break. No homework until you get back. On Friday… Exam 2 Grades are posted. Nighttime observing.
The Milky Way. The Milky Way: Our Home Galaxy What are the different components of the Milky Way? How do we see those components? What does a map of each.
NOTES: The Galactocentric Perspective The Milky Way: Herschel The slab universe Kapteyn The red blood cell universe Harlow Shapley We.
Notes 4-1: Galaxies 4/15/09. People have been observing the night sky since antiquity. A truly dark sky, like the one seen here, will reveal some amazing.
Astronomy 2 Overview of the Universe Spring Lectures on External Galaxies. Joe Miller.
Simulated black hole picture
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Milky Way astronomy.com.
Even our unaided eyes tell us that we live in some kind of disk structure. We see the Milky Way in the summer time as we look toward the center (white.
Disk, Bulge, Halo Rotation Curve Galactic Center
Our Milky Way Galaxy.
Galaxies How big is the Universe? Types of galaxies Groups of galaxies
The Milky Way Galaxy Sun – you are here.
Presentation transcript:

Lecture 12: Unveiling the Milky Way Astronomy 1143 – Spring 2014

Key Ideas Mapping our Galaxy and Andromeda Luminosity Distances need Standard Candles Spectroscopic Parallaxes Period-Luminosity Relations for Cepheids & RR Lyraes The Milky Way is our Galaxy Diffuse band of light crossing the sky Most of the stars in the Galaxy lie in a disk Position of Sun in the Galaxy – not the center! Star Counts: Herschels & Kapteyn Globular Cluster Distribution: Shapley

Key Ideas Gas and Dust lie between the stars Dust leads to extinction and reddening Not accounting for dust led to confusion about size Nature of Nebulae – important scientific question Objects inside Milky Way or distant galaxies like MW? Problems: “nebulae” includes several different phenomena, inaccurate stellar distances, inaccurate measurements of motion Accurate stellar distances established… We are in the Milky Way, a spiral galaxy Milky Way is one of many galaxies in Universe

Luminosity Distances Indirect distance estimate: Measure the object’s Apparent Brightness, B Assume the object’s Luminosity, L Solve for the object’s distance, d, by applying the Inverse Square Law of Brightness

Luminosity Assuming a luminosity is a critical step. We need to find something that we can observe about an object that tells us its luminosity For example: We can look at the color of an object We can look at the spectrum of an object We can look at the lightcurve of an object Then we need to calibrate it by knowing the luminosity of an identical object

Standard Candles Objects whose Luminosity you know ahead of time. Calibrate the Luminosities of nearby objects for which you have distances from Trigonometric Parallaxes. Identify distant but similar objects, using a distance-independent property that they share. Assume that the distant objects have the same Luminosity as the nearby objects.

Examples of Standard Candles Normal Stars Spectral type is the same as a star with a known luminosity – say a star with a known parallax Pulsating Stars Evolved Stars can be unstable Small Changes in Luminosity Period-(Average) Luminosity Relationship

All Stars are not like the Sun

Stellar Spectra

Spectroscopic Parallax Limits Distance Limit: Practical limit is few 100,000 pc – need to get spectra of individual stars Problems: Stars within each class do not have exactly the same luminosity Depends on composition. Faint spectra give poor classifications. Method works best for clusters of stars, rather than for individual stars.

Periodic Variable Stars Stars whose brightness varies regularly with a characteristic, periodic pattern. Distance-Independent Property: Period (repetition time) of their cycle of brightness variations. Physics: Period-Luminosity Relations exist for certain classes of periodic variable stars. Measuring the Period gives the Luminosity.

Period-Luminosity Relationship Period (days) Luminosity (L sun )  Cephei Stars RR Lyrae stars

Cepheid Variables Rhythmically Pulsating Supergiant stars: Found in young star clusters Luminosities of ~ 10 3  4 L sun Brightness Range: few % to 2  3 times Period Range: 1 day to ~50 days. Period-Luminosity Relation: Longer Period = Higher Luminosity P = 3 days, L ~ 10 3 L sun P = 30 days, L ~ 10 4 L sun

Typical Cepheid Light Curves LCB 171 P ~ 3 days LCB 272 P ~ 2 days time Brightness Period Easier to get a measurement of brightness than a spectrum, especially for a lot of objects at once

Example: Cepheid with a 10-day period Period (days) Luminosity (L sun ) L=5011 L sun P=10 d (observable) Cepheid P-L Relation (calibrated)

Example You measure the period of a Cepheid to be 5.4 days. What is its luminosity?

Cepheid Variable Limitations Found only in young star clusters. Distance Limit: 30  40 Megaparsecs (Hubble Space Telescope) Crucial for measuring distances to galaxies. Problems: Few Cepheids with good Trigonometric Parallaxes P-L relation may depend on Composition Two types of Cepheids with different P-L relations (  Cephei and W Virginis).

Cepheids with HST

RR Lyrae Variables Pulsating old stars: Luminosity of ~50 L sun Brightness Range: factor of ~ 2  3 Period Range: Few hours up to ~ 1 day. Relatives of Cepheid Variables Period-Luminosity Relation Less strong than for Cepheids

RR Lyrae Light Curve

RR Lyrae Star Limitations Found in old clusters, Galactic bulge & halo Distance Limit: ~1 Megaparsec (Hubble) Limited to our Galaxy & Andromeda Problems: No RR Lyrae stars with good Trigonometric Parallaxes Less bright than Cepheid stars, so useful only relatively nearby

The Cosmic Distance Scale No single method will provide distances on all cosmic scales: Calibrate parallaxes using the AU Calibrate spectroscopic parallaxes using geometric parallaxes Calibrate Cepheid and RR Lyrae star distances using clusters with spectroscopic or geometric parallaxes Imprecision at each step carries forward, making subsequent steps less precise. This is the challenge of measuring distances.

Announcements Don’t forget to sign the attendance sheet Homework #1 thoughts

The Milky Way Diffuse band of light crossing the night sky All cultures have named it: Celestial River Celestial Road or Path Our names are derived from Greek and Latin: Greek: Galaxias kuklos = “Milky Band” Latin: Via Lactea = “Road of Milk”

View from center of a sphere

View from edge of sphere

View from center of disk

View from edge of disk Star counts and star distances in different directions can tell you the shape of the Milky Way

The Herschels’ Star Gauges William & Caroline Herschel (1785): Counted stars along 683 lines of sight using their 48-inch telescope. Assumed all stars are the same luminosity, so relative brightness gives relative distance. Assumed that they could see all the way to the edges of the system. Model: Flattened Milky Way (“grindstone”) Sun is located very near the center

The Herschels’ Milky Way Map (1785) Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. v75, 213 (1785)

The Kapteyn Universe Jacobus Kapteyn (1901 thru 1922): Used photographic star counts Estimated distances statistically based on parallaxes & proper motions of nearby stars. Neglected interstellar absorption of starlight (assumes fainter stars are just farther away). Model: Flattened disk 15 kpc across & 3 kpc thick The Sun is located slightly off center

Kapteyn Milky Way Model (1922) ~17 kpc ~3 kpc 1 kpc = 1 kiloparsec = 1000 pc

Harlow Shapley (1915 thru 1921) Astronomer at Harvard Noticed two facts about Globular Clusters: 1.Uniformly distributed above & below the Milky Way on the sky 2.Concentrated on the sky toward Sagittarius Observations: 1.Globular Cluster distances from RR Lyrae stars 2.Used these distances to map the globular cluster distribution in space.

Shapley’s Globular Cluster Distribution kpc

The Greater Milky Way Shapley’s Results (1921): Globular clusters form a subsystem centered on the Milky Way. The Sun is 16 kpc from the MW center. MW is a flattened disk ~100 kpc across Right basic result, it’s but too big: Shapley ignored interstellar absorption Caused him to overestimate the distances

Gas and Dust: the stuff between the stars The space between the stars is not a vacuum. Air on Earth – 2.5 x particles/cm 3 Vacuum pump – particles/cm 3 Interstellar space – 1 particle/cm 3 Composition similar to solar atmosphere By number: 90% H, 10% He, 0.1% heavy By mass: 72% H, 26% He, 2% heavy Mostly atomic H and He, heavies form dust

Dust About 1% of the interstellar medium is in the form of dust Very small particles: think soot, not dust bunnies Composed of carbon, silicon, iron and other heavy elements Dust is very effective at blocking visible light. Makes stars appear fainter, which could fool an observer

Dust causes Extinction If there were as much dust in the air of this room as there is in the gas of the Galaxy, it would be difficult to see your notepad in front of you. Therefore the dust in the Galaxy is very important and must be understood to understand Galactic structure.

We can see star light from farther away if we look in the infrared

The Milky Way A flattened disk of stars with a central bulge Sun is ~8 kpc from the center in Sagittarius ~30 kpc in diameter and ~1 kpc thick Galactic Center and much of the disk is obscured by dust in the plane of the Galaxy 30kpc

If we could see the Milky Way galaxy edge-on from outside: = 8000 parsecs = 26,000 light-years =1.7 billion AU

Probing the skies The return of Halley’s Comet in 1758 made comets very, very popular All astronomers wanted to discover one, so they used their telescopes to sweep the skies looking for faint, fuzzy objects If it were a comet, it would move from night to night If it didn’t move, it was disappointing. Charles Messier cataloged these objects…

Fuzzy Objects in the Sky :

The Nature of the Nebulae With telescopes, astronomers found fuzzy things in the sky Called them “nebulae” -- Latin word for cloud Were they galaxies like the Milky Way? Were they clouds of gas inside the Milky Way? Observations with new and better instruments and new techniques gradually revealed several clues to the nature of these objects.

Observations of Nebulae During the 19 th century, ever larger telescopes were built. Some nebulae were seen to have a spiral structure Spectra of objects – spiral nebulae had spectra similar to stars Other nebulae, such as planetary nebulae, had very different spectra – different phenomena

Observations of Nebulae Bright outbursts observed in spiral nebulae (such as S Andromedae in 1885) Are these similar to the novae (rapid brightening of individual stars) seen in the Milky Way? The spiral nebulae in general have large velocities heading away from us. There were also observations of rotation. Are the spiral nebulae like the Milky Way?

Shapley-Curtis Debate Shapley: spiral nebulae are not galaxies like MW Distances large, but not large enough Milky Way is very large; spiral nebulae aren’t far enough away Events like S Andromedae would have to be much more luminous than Milky Way novae Observed rotation cannot be explained if at large distances Curtis: spiral nebulae are galaxies outside MW Milky Way is not so big; spiral nebulae can easily be outside Appearance of nova says spiral nebulae made of stars Large speeds away from us not seen for stars & objects that we know are in the Milky Way Rotation measurements are wrong

Rotation and Speeds Your calculation of how far (in kilometers) the spot in the spiral nebula moves depends on how far you think the object is. Angular size + distance = physical size.

Hubble Ends the Debate Edwin Hubble (1923): Using the new 100-inch telescope on Mt. Wilson in California. Found a Cepheid Variable in Andromeda Shapley’s P-L relationship gave a distance of 300 kpc By 1925: Hubble had measured 10 Cepheid variables The Distance to Andromeda: ~1000 kpc. Size of the Milky Way: 30 kpc

Hubble’s Cepheid in Andromeda 100-inch Telescope (Mt. Wilson)

Current Understanding With modern technology and more decades of investigation, we know: Spiral “nebulae” clearly resolved into stars There are extremely luminous stellar explosions in galaxies called supernova. The rotation measurements incorrect The fact that galaxies are moving away from the Milky Way in general is extremely interesting.

Andromeda (M31 ) Nearest bright galaxy to the Milky Way: Distance ~700 kpc Many similarities to the Milky Way Both are large spiral galaxies Both have similar stellar and gas contents Andromeda gives us an approximate outside view of our own Galaxy.

Galaxies come in many shapes

Our Place in the Neighborhood Obtaining accurate distances for many stars and galaxies led to our understanding of The size and shape of the Milky Way and the Sun’s place in it The fact that the Milky Way is one of many galaxies in the Universe The properties of galaxies outside of our own The expansion of the Universe