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THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM

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Title: THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM


1
THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  • The Interstellar Medium (ISM) is the material
    which fills the space between the stars.
  • The ISM consists of gas (mostly hydrogen and
    helium), plus solid particles, or dust (composed
    mostly of heavier elements, such as carbon).
  • The elemental abundances of the ISM (gas and dust
    components) are similar to those of the Sun and
    most stars.
  • The ISM is the material from which new stars and
    planets are formed (a process continuing at
    present).
  • The ISM is highly variable in its density
    distribution in space. However, the ratio of gas
    to dust percentage is roughly constant.
  • Temperature, composition, and other properties of
    the interstellar material are highly variable
    throughout space.
  • The ISM requires a broad range of techniques,
    equipment, and wavelength ranges of observation
    for its full and complete characterization.

2
THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  • The interstellar medium is detectable and
    measurable by a variety of methods, involving
    remote sensing of electromagnetic radiation over
    a very wide range of wavelengths (extending from
    radio waves to gamma rays).
  • The distribution of interstellar material in our
    Galaxy is very non-uniform but tends to be more
    concentrated toward the plane of the Galaxy than
    are the visible stars.
  • Interstellar gas is most evident, at visible
    wavelengths, in the regions near very hot stars,
    whose extreme-ultraviolet radiation excites and
    ionizes the interstellar gas.
  • Interstellar atomic hydrogen is evident by its
    emission or absorption of radio waves (21 cm
    wavelength) in all regions of our Galaxy (not
    just in the local vicinity of stars).
  • Interstellar dust is evident by its obscuration
    of starlight, from stars lying behind
    concentrations of dust, and by its reflection
    and/or scattering of starlight from stars in or
    near concentrations of interstellar dust.

3
The Milky Way in Sagittarius (Including Galactic
Center Direction)
4
THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  • When the Universe was first created, all material
    was in the form of interstellar material, which
    consisted of only hydrogen, helium, and small
    amounts of deuterium (heavy hydrogen) and
    lithium.
  • All heavier elements have been created by
    thermonuclear reactions in the cores of stars
    formed from this primordial gas.
  • As a result of succeeding generations of star
    formation, evolution, and death, the interstellar
    medium has been enriched in heavier elements and
    depleted of H and especially D and Li (which are
    the most easily burned in thermonuclear
    fusion).
  • However, even now, the heavy elements constitute
    less than 1 (by number of atoms) of the
    interstellar medium in our galaxy .

5
COSMIC ABUNDANCES OF THE ELEMENTS(By Number
of Atoms)
Hydrogen H 106 Helium He 105 Oxygen O 890 Neon
Ne 500 Carbon C 400 Nitrogen N 110 Silicon Si 32

Iron Fe 20-30 Magnesium Mg 25 Sulfur S 22 Argon
Ar 7.8 Sodium Na 2 Aluminum Al 1.7 Calcium Ca 1.
6
6
THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  • The ratio of dust to gas density is nearly the
    same in most regions of interstellar space.
  • However, the density and temperature of the
    interstellar medium can vary over a wide range.
  • For static conditions to prevail, the gas
    pressure p nkT must be constant.
  • Therefore, regions of high gas density are
    regions of low gas temperature, and vice versa.
  • A typical atomic hydrogen density in interstellar
    space is one H atom per cubic centimeter.
  • Very hot, low density regions of interstellar
    space can have less than 0.01 H atom /cm3 and
    temperatures in excess of 105 K.
  • Dark molecular clouds, on the other hand, can
    have very low temperatures (lt30 K) and very high
    densities (gt106 /cm3).

7
THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  • In most regions of interstellar space, hydrogen
    exists in the neutral, atomic form, as do most
    other common elements.
  • Atomic hydrogen is detectable in space by its
    emission or absorption of radio waves at a
    wavelength of 21 cm.
  • Some elements, such as carbon, can exist in
    ionized form in the general interstellar medium.
    This is due to stellar ultraviolet radiation not
    sufficiently energetic to ionize hydrogen.
  • In dense regions of the interstellar medium,
    molecules can be formed. These include H2, CO,
    CH, CN, OH, and many others.
  • In dense molecular clouds, a major fraction of
    the hydrogen can be in the form of H2.
  • The dust component of the interstellar medium is
    made up of carbon (largely in the form of
    graphite), silicon, and lesser amounts of heavier
    elements and their compounds.
  • In the very darkest and densest clouds, complex
    organic molecules are detected using microwave
    and infrared spectroscopy.

8
THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM
  • These dense molecular clouds are also the sites
    of new star (and planetary system) formation.
  • The relationship p nkT, as mentioned
    previously, establishes pressure uniformity
    between cold, dense regions and hot, low-density
    regions of the interstellar medium.
  • However, an additional factor tends to compress
    the cold, high-density regions to an even greater
    degree stellar radiation pressure on the dust
    component of the interstellar material.
  • Once a cold, dense cloud has reached the point at
    which its opacity to starlight is a significant
    factor, it will tend to contract as a result.
  • In turn, as the cloud contracts, its
    self-gravitational force also comes into play, to
    further expedite contraction.
  • Since the clouds usually have some rotational
    velocity, due in part to the general rotation of
    the Galaxy about its center, the law of
    conservation of angular momentum results in
    greater contraction parallel to, vs.
    perpendicular to, the axis of rotation.
  • The result is, potentially, a disk-shaped
    condensation from which planets, as well as
    central stars, can form, of which our solar
    system is the best-known example.

9
INTERSTELLAR NEBULAE
  • Regions of diffuse glow, or obscuration of
    background stars, due to interstellar material
    are called nebulae (Latin for clouds).
  • Regions of diffuse glow due to reflection of
    starlight by the dust particle component of the
    interstellar medium, are known as reflection
    nebulae.
  • Regions of emission of light by atoms or
    molecules, excited by radiation from nearby
    stars, are called emission nebulae.
  • Regions of the sky in which background stars
    appear to be obscured by material in front of
    these stars, are known as dark nebulae.
  • Many diffuse nebulae have both emission and
    reflection components.
  • Supernova remnants are a special case of emission
    nebulae, in which interstellar gas is excited by
    the shock wave produced by the explosion of a
    star, a supernova event.

10
Clouds of Interstellar Gas and Dust in
Scorpius/Ophiuchus
11
Interstellar Gas and Dust in Scorpius/Ophiuchus
? Ophiuchi
? Scorpii
? Scorpii (Antares)
12
Pleiades Star Cluster and Reflection Nebulosity
13
EMISSION NEBULAE
  • The most common type of emission nebula is the
    result of the photoionization and excitation of
    surrounding interstellar gas, by the far- and
    extreme-ultraviolet radiation of very hot early
    type stars (spectral types O and early B).
  • These stars emit a major part of their radiation
    at wavelengths shortward of that which
    corresponds to the photoionization energy of
    atomic hydrogen (91.2 nanometers wavelength, or
    13.6 electron volts energy).
  • Since the lifetimes of these very hot stars are
    much shorter than those of cooler and less
    luminous stars, such as our Sun, most emission
    nebulae of this type (such as the Orion Nebula)
    are associated with regions of dense interstellar
    material in which new stars are still in the
    process of formation.
  • Another type of emission nebula, the so-called
    planetary nebula, is associated with the late
    stages of stellar evolution, in which the star
    casts off its outer envelope on its way to its
    becoming a white dwarf star (which can be even
    hotter, though much less luminous, than the very
    young early type stars).

14
The Rosette (Emission) Nebula in Monoceros
15
Very Wide Field, Deep Exposure View of the Orion
Region
N
16
Interstellar Hydrogen Fluorescence in Orion
Interstellar Hydrogen Fluorescence in Orion
North
17
Flame Nebula and Horsehead Nebula in Orion
18
The Horsehead Nebula in Orion (Ground-Based and
HST)
19
The Orion Nebula Region
The Orion Nebula Region
N
20
The Orion Nebula
The Orion Nebula - Closeup
N
The Orion Nebula
21
Orion Nebula Hubble Space Telescope View
22
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23
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24
Cone Nebula in Monoceros - Ground-Based Visible
Light Image
25
The Cone Nebula in Monoceros As Observed with the
HSTs Advanced Camera for Surveys
26
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27
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28
Trifid Nebula (M20)- Ground-Based Telescope
(NOAO) View
HST View
29
Trifid Nebula as Viewed by Hubble Space Telescope
30
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31
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32
The Eagle Nebula (M16), Viewed by National
Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO)
33
Ground-Based and HST Images of M16
HST - ACS
HST WFPC2
34
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35
HST Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) View of
Eagle Nebula (M16) Northeast Region
36
M16 HST-ACS Image Closeups
37
Ground-Based Telescopic Image of the ? Carina
Nebula
38
? Carina, Keyhole Nebula Ground-Based
Telescopic Image, Closeup
39
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40
IC 2944 Thackerays Globules
HST View
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