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16 Galaxies Island Universes. 16 Copyright – FORS1 VLTI, European Southern Observatory.

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Presentation on theme: "16 Galaxies Island Universes. 16 Copyright – FORS1 VLTI, European Southern Observatory."— Presentation transcript:

1 16 Galaxies Island Universes

2 16 Copyright – FORS1 VLTI, European Southern Observatory

3 16 Hubble Tuning Fork

4 16 Ellipticals

5 16 Huge No gas. No dust. No young stars. Nothing but old stars. –Random orbits.

6 16 M 87 Copyright – Anglo-Australian Telescope Board Copyright - HST

7 16 Hubble Tuning Fork

8 16 Copyright – Adam Block, KPNO

9 16 Spirals

10 16 Like Milky Way. Disks and bulge. Young stars and old. Gas and dust. Stars forming. Stars dying. M81 and M82 – Copyright R. Gendler

11 16 M63 Copyright – S. Miyazaki, Suburu

12 16 NGC1365 Copyright – VLT

13 16 M31 The Andromeda Galaxy Copyright – Jason Ware Copyright – S. Miyazaki, Suburu

14 16 M33 – Copyright NOAO

15 16 M51 - Copyright HST John P. Gleason

16 16 NGC 4314

17 16 NGC 891 – Copyright J.C. Barentine, NOAO NGC 891 – Copyright WIYN

18 16 Sombrero Galaxy – Copyright P. Barthel VLT M10 – copyright Credner and Kohle

19 16 NGC 4526

20 16 Irregulars

21 16 Distance to Near Galaxies Need a standard candle. If there is something in a galaxy which has a known luminosity we can determine a distance. Several candidates: –Variable stars –Supernovae –“Brightest” stars

22 16 M3 Variables in Clusters Copyright – K. Stanek (Harvard)

23 16 Variable Stars For RR Lyrae stars: –Average luminosity is a standard candle –Always ~ 100 x Sun For Cepheid variables: –Pulsation period is proportional to average luminosity –Observe the period  find the luminosity Good to 15 Mpc!

24 16 Nearby Galaxies Cepheids Period Luminosity  M v Know m v Get Distance

25 16 For Cepheid in M100 P = 20 days. From P-L: L = 10000 x Sun M sun = 5, so M Cep = -5 m = 20 m – M = 25 So 25/5 = 5 = log(d/10pc) How log works: –What is 100 = 10 x ? –Same as saying 2 = log(100) So 5 = log(d/10pc) d/10pc = 100000 D = 1,000,000 pc How it works

26 16 The Local Group

27 16 Groups

28 16 The Virgo Cluster

29 16 Clusters

30 16 Concept Test A standard candle can be any object (or class of object) that: a.Always has the same luminosity. b.Has some means of knowing its luminosity without first needing to know its distance. c.Can vary in brightness (as long as it always has the same average luminosity). d.Has a known absolute magnitude. e.Always gives off the same amount of energy, regardless of distance from us.

31 16

32 16 NGC 1316 – Copyright VLT

33 16

34 16 Distant Galaxies Can’t see individual stars. Supernovae rare. Can use nearby galaxies to get distances to further galaxies. Distance ladder: –Parallax  nearby stars –Nearby stars  H-R diagram –H-R diagram  distant stars (variables) –Variable stars  nearby galaxies –Nearby galaxies  Hubble’s Law

35 16 21cm Radiation Neutral hydrogen (HI) gives off light, = 21cm. Milky Way HI emission – Copyright J. Dickey

36 16 Extragalactic HI Observe HI in other galaxies. Measure wavelength of 21 cm radiation. Doppler Shift: Get velocity away from us.

37 16 Hubble’s Law Measure the velocity of every galaxy. Nearly all are redshifted. Use Cepheids to measure distances to nearby galaxies. Result: The faster it’s moving, the farther away it is. H o = 71 km/s/Mpc

38 16 Map the Universe v = H o D If you know H o : 71 km/s/Mpc Measure v Get D Find: Voids Walls Clusters

39 16 140 Mpc 70 Mpc

40 16 Concept Test Imagine that Cepheid variables were more luminous than previously thought. As a result, Hubble’s constant would be: a.Smaller than previously thought. b.Larger than previously thought. c.Unchanged since we aren’t changing either the velocity or position of the galaxy. d.None of the above.

41 16 Limits to Hubble’s Law Negative velocity? Galaxy pairs? Clusters? Orbits?

42 16 Homework #16 For Friday Read: Bennett Ch 22.1 – 22.4 Do Ch22: –Problems: 9, 12


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