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III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium

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1 III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium
Ch. 14 End of Ch. 13 III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium

2 III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium
A. Interstellar Matter: Gas (mostly hydrogen) and dust •Nebulae •Extinction and reddening •Interstellar absorption lines •Radio observations B. Nebulae • Emission • Reflection • Dark C. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars

3 IIIA. Interstellar Matter: Gas (mostly hydrogen) and dust
Interstellar Medium IIIA. Interstellar Matter: Gas (mostly hydrogen) and dust How do we know that Interstellar Matter is there: •Nebulae •Extinction and reddening •Interstellar absorption lines •Radio observations

4 Extinction and Reddening: interstellar dust will make stars look fainter and redder

5 Review: Absorption Spectrum

6 Interstellar Absorption Lines

7 Radio Observations: some molecules can be detected with radiotelescopes

8 IIIB. Nebulae • Emission Nebulae • Reflection Nebulae • Dark Nebulae

9 Question 1 Dark nebulae are Regions of space without any stars
Dense clouds of gas and dust that obscure the light from stars Black holes All the answers are correct

10 Question 1 Dark nebulae are Regions of space without any stars
Dense clouds of gas and dust that obscure the light from stars Black holes All the answers are correct

11 Question 2 Emission nebulae are: Regions of space without any stars
Low density gas near hot stars that show emission line spectra Light from stars reflected by nearby dust None of the answers are correct

12 Question 2 Emission nebulae are: Regions of space without any stars
Low density gas near hot stars that show emission line spectra Light from stars reflected by nearby dust

13 Question 3 Reflection nebulae are: Regions of space without any stars
Low density gas near hot stars that show emission line spectra Light from stars reflected by nearby dust None of the answers are correct

14 Question 3 Reflection nebulae are: Regions of space without any stars
Low density gas near hot stars that show emission line spectra Light from stars reflected by nearby dust None of the answers are correct

15 Emission Spectrum

16 Emission Nebula (Eagle Nebula)
Hubble Space Telescope Image

17 Reflection Nebula

18 Dark Nebulae

19 Question 4 What happens after an interstellar cloud of gas and dust is compressed and collapses: It will heat and contract If it gets hot enough (10 million K) it can produce energy through hydrogen fusion It can produce main sequence stars

20 Question 4 What happens after an interstellar cloud of gas and dust is compressed and collapses: It will heat and contract If it gets hot enough (10 million K) it can produce energy through hydrogen fusion It can produce main sequence stars All of the above

21 How does our galaxy recycle gas into stars?

22 IIIC. Cycle of Birth and Deaths of Stars
Interstellar cloud of gas and dust is compressed and collapses to form stars After leaving the main sequence red giants eject their outer layers back to the interstellar medium Supernovae explode and eject their outer layers back to the interstellar medium Supernova explosions and other events can compress an interstellar cloud of gas and dust that collapses to form stars ………..

23 Remember Sun’s Evolutionary Process
Remember Sun’s Evolutionary Process* *This is an artist conception, not an HR diagram or a real motion of the Sun

24 Remember mass loss in Intermediate Mass Stars

25 Remember Supernova explosions

26 Star-gas-star cycle Recycles gas from old stars into new star systems

27 Ch. 14 Ch. 14. The Milky Way

28 Ch. 14 OUTLINE Shorter than book
14.1 The Milky Way Revealed 14.2 Galactic Recycling (closely related to Ch. 13) 14.3 The History of the Milky Way 14.4 The Mysterious Galactic Center

29 14.1 The Milky Way Revealed Our Goals for Learning (not exactly like book) • What does our galaxy look like? • Where do stars form in our galaxy?

30 What does our galaxy look like?

31 The Milky Way galaxy appears in our sky as a faint band of light

32 Dusty gas clouds obscure our view because they absorb visible light
This is the interstellar medium that makes new star systems

33 All-Sky View at visible wavelengths
plotted in galactic coordinates What if we could see through most of that dust?

34 All-Sky View at visible wavelengths
All-Sky View at infrared wavelengths

35 Remember Extinction and Reddening: interstellar dust will make stars look fainter and redder. Dust will affect more the shorter (bluer) wavelengths and less the longer (redder) wavelengths. By looking at infrared wavelengths we can see through most of the dust.

36 The Shape of our Galaxy: a flattened disk
We see our galaxy edge-on Primary features: disk, bulge, halo, globular clusters

37 If we could view the Milky Way from above the disk, we would see its spiral arms

38 Andromeda Galaxy: our twin galaxy
Our Galaxy looks like Andromeda

39 How do we know what our galaxy would look like if viewed from the top
How do we know what our galaxy would look like if viewed from the top? Infrared and Radio observations penetrate dark interstellar clouds

40

41 Stellar Populations Turns out that there are two types of stars in the Galaxy Population I: Relatively young. Similar to the Sun. Tend to be in the galactic disk. Richer in heavy elements Population II: Few heavy elements, very old (12-14 billion years), tend to be in the center of the galaxy or in globular clusters

42 Remember CH 11 Part III Star Clusters:
Two types of clusters: Open and Globular

43 Two types of star clusters
Open clusters: young, contain up to several thousand stars and are found in the disk of the galaxy (Population I). Globular clusters: old, contain hundreds of thousands of stars, all closely packed together. They are found mainly in the halo of the galaxy (Population II).

44 14.2 Galactic Recycling Our Goals for Learning
• How does our galaxy recycle gas into stars? • Where do stars tend to form in our galaxy?

45 How does our galaxy recycle gas into stars?

46 Star-gas-star cycle Recycles gas from old stars into new star systems

47 14.2 Galactic Recycling • Where do stars tend to form in our galaxy?

48 14.2 Galactic Recycling • Where do stars tend to form in our galaxy? In the Disk

49 Question 4 What happens after an interstellar cloud of gas and dust is compressed and collapses: It will heat and contract If it gets hot enough (10 million K) it can produce energy through hydrogen fusion It can produce main sequence stars

50 Question 4 What happens after an interstellar cloud of gas and dust is compressed and collapses: It will heat and contract If it gets hot enough (10 million K) it can produce energy through hydrogen fusion It can produce main sequence stars D. All of the above

51 How does our galaxy recycle gas into stars?

52 Cycle of Birth and Deaths of Stars
Interstellar cloud of gas and dust is compressed and collapses to form stars After leaving the main sequence red giants eject their outer layers back to the interstellar medium Supernovas explode and eject their outer layers back to the interstellar medium Supernova explosions and other events can compress an interstellar cloud of gas and dust that collapses to form stars ………..

53 Remember the Sun’s Evolutionary Process

54 Remember mass loss in Intermediate Mass Stars

55 Remember Supernova explosions

56 Star-gas-star cycle Recycles gas from old stars into new star systems

57 Halo: no blue stars  no star formation
Disk: blue stars  star formation

58 Halo: No emission nebulae, no blue stars
 no star formation Disk: emission nebulae, blue stars  star formation

59 Much of star formation in disk happens in spiral arms
Emission Nebulae Blue Stars Gas Clouds Spiral arms are waves of star formation The Whirlpool Galaxy

60 14.3 The History of the Milky Way
Our Goals for Learning • What clues to our galaxy’s history do halo stars hold? How did our galaxy form?

61 What clues to our galaxy’s history do halo stars hold?

62 Halo Stars: % heavy elements (O, Fe, …), only old stars Disk Stars: 2% heavy elements, stars of all ages

63 Halo Stars: % heavy elements (O, Fe, …), only old stars Halo stars formed first, then stopped Disk Stars: 2% heavy elements, stars of all ages

64 Halo Stars: % heavy elements (O, Fe, …), only old stars Halo stars formed first, then stopped Disk Stars: 2% heavy elements, stars of all ages Disk stars formed later, kept forming

65 How did our galaxy form?

66 Our galaxy probably formed from a giant gas cloud

67 Halo stars formed first as gravity caused cloud to contract

68 Remaining gas settled into spinning disk

69 Stars continuously form in disk as galaxy grows older
Note: This model is oversimplified Stars continuously form in disk as galaxy grows older

70 What have we learned? • What clues to our galaxy’s history do halo stars hold? The halo generally contains only old, low-mass stars with a much smaller proportion of heavy elements than stars in the disk. Thus, halo stars must have formed early in the galaxy’s history, before the gas settled into a disk.

71 What have we learned? • How did our galaxy form?
The galaxy probably began as a huge blob of gas called a protogalactic cloud. Gravity caused the cloud to shrink in size, and conservation of angular momentum caused the gas to form the spinning disk of our galaxy. Stars in the halo formed before the gas finished collapsing into the disk.

72 14.4 The Mysterious Galactic Center
Our Goals for Learning • What lies in the center of our galaxy?

73 What lies in the center of our galaxy?

74 Strange radio sources in galactic center
Stars at galactic center

75 Orbits of stars indicate a mass of about 4 million MSun
Stars appear to be orbiting something massive but invisible … a black hole! Orbits of stars indicate a mass of about 4 million MSun Download a great movie of star motions from:

76 What have we learned? • What lies in the center of our galaxy?
Motions of stars near the center of our galaxy suggest that it contains a black hole about 4 million times as massive as the Sun. The black hole appears to be powering a bright source of radio emission.


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