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Chapter 15, Galaxies

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M87 Elliptical Galaxy in Virgo. Galaxy Classification ... observed a Cepheid variable in the face-on spiral galaxy M100 in Virgo Cluster ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 15, Galaxies


1
Chapter 15, Galaxies
  • Galaxies come in different size and shape. In
    the previous chapter, we talked about how
    galaxies provide an environment for the stars to
    be born and die, and enrich the heavy element
    content of the galaxy. In this chapter, we will
    talk about
  • Galaxy Classification
  • Location of Galaxies in the Universe
  • Galaxy Evolution
  • Quasars and AGN (Active Galactic Nuclei)

2
Spiral Galaxies
  • NGC (New General Catalog) 4594
  • NGC 1300 barred spiral
  • NGC 4594 Sombrero Galaxy. Large bulge, small
    disk

3
Elliptical and Irregular
  • M87 Elliptical Galaxy in Virgo
  • Large Magellanic Cloud, irregular galaxy

4
Galaxy Classification
  • Galaxies come in different size and shape
  • Spiral Galaxies
  • Barred Spiral Spiral galaxy with a bar.
  • Lenticular galaxy Spiral galaxy without spiral
    arms.
  • Formed by gas clouds with large initial angular
    momentum.
  • Elliptical Galaxies
  • Similar to the bulge of the spiral galaxies.
  • Formed by gas clouds with small initial angular
    momentum.
  • Formed by high density cloudsmore efficient
    cooling, faster star formation, exhausting the
    gas supply before the galaxy has time to collapse
    into the disk.
  • Formed by collision and merging of galaxies.
  • Irregular Galaxies
  • Usually more distant galaxies.
  • Starburst galaxies
  • Galaxies with high star forming rate. Merging
    galaxies?
  • Quasars, Active Galactic Nuclei
  • Distant objects. Extremely luminouscould be
    1,000 times the luminosity of the Milky Way.
  • Supermassive Black holes?

5
Galaxy Facts
  • Grouping
  • Spiral galaxies are usually found in loosely
    associated small group (tens) of galaxies
  • Ellipticals are commonly found in large cluster
    of galaxies containing hundreds or thousands of
    galaxies extending over tens of millions of
    light-years.
  • Size
  • Most of the large galaxies are spiral galaxies
  • While some of the largest galaxies are giant
    elliptical galaxies, the most common type of
    galaxy in the universe is small elliptical
    galaxy.
  • Very small ellipticals (or dwarf spheroidals,
    less than a billion stars) are often found near
    large spirals our Milky Way galaxy has 10 or
    more nearby

6
Where are the Galaxies?
  • Where are the galaxies located? Are they located
    within the Milky Way, or are they much further
    away from us than the stars?
  • Before the 1920s, there were no reliable methods
    of measuring the distance to the galaxies. Many
    people believed that the galaxies were located
    within the Milky Way
  • How do we measure the distance of objects far
    away in the universe, much farther than the
    distance that can be measured by stellar
    parallax?
  • Measurement of distance farther than the reach of
    stellar parallax rely on our ability to find
    objects with known luminosity
  • In 1924, Edwin Hubble determined the distance to
    the Andromeda galaxy using Cepheid variables,
    thus proving that the galaxies are located far
    beyond the stars in the Milky Way galaxy.

7
Measuring Cosmological Distance
  • The principle method of measuring astronomical
    distance is the
  • distance-luminosity relation
  • However, the apparent brightness B is the only
    thing we can measure accurately in most of the
    cases.
  • If we know the distance D, we can determine the
    luminosity L.
  • If we know the luminosity L, then we can
    determine the distance D.
  • Need to find Standard Candles astronomical
    objects with known luminosity.
  • Main sequence stars.
  • Cepheid variables.
  • White dwarf supernovae.
  • Galaxies (using Tully-Fisher Law).

8
The Cosmological Distance Ladder
  • Methods of Measuring Distance and their useful
    range
  • Radar ranging D lt 10-4 light-years
  • Parallax D lt 103 light-years
  • Standard Candles
  • Main sequence stars D lt 105 light-years
  • Cepheid variables D lt 107 light-years
  • White dwarf supernovae D lt 1010 light-years
  • Hubbles Law 1010 ly and beyond

9
Calibrating the Cosmic Tape Measure
  • We rely heavily on the standard candles for
    the measurement of the cosmological distance. How
    do we make sure that these standard candles are
    truly standard?
  • Use independent measurements to check the
    luminosity of the standard candle.
  • For example, we can use parallax measurements of
    the distance to main sequence stars to check
    measurements of distance using main-sequence
    fitting. If we do this for a few of them, then we
    can verify the assumption that the main sequence
    stars are good standard candle. However, this
    method works only for stars that are relatively
    close by.
  • The standard candles we had verified in close
    range can now be used (by extrapolation) to
    measure the distance to more remote objects. This
    new distance measure then allows us to calibrate
    the next standard candle.
  • For example we used the distance measured by
    observation of Cepheid variables to check the
    assumption of the constancy of the white dwarf
    supernovae.
  • Keep going

10
Main Sequence Fitting
  • Main sequence stars with the same color
    should have the same luminosity. So, if we
    compare the (pseudo) H-R diagram of a star
    cluster with unknown distance (using their
    apparent brightness instead of luminosity) to
    that of a group of main sequence stars with known
    distance, then we can determine the distance to
    this new cluster.
  • For example
  • Hyades (in constellation Taurus) is a open
    cluster about 150 light years away. Its distance
    is close enough to be measured by stellar
    parallax.
  • Comparing the H-R Diagrams of Hyades with that of
    Pleiades, we can determine that the distance of
    Pleiades should be 2.75 times farther than
    Hyadesor, 1502.75 410 light years.
  • New parallax measurement of Hyades by Hipparcos
    (ESO Space Interferometry mission) yielded a
    distance of 438 light years

11
Cepheid Variables
  • Cepheid variable stars are population I
    (metal-rich) yellow giant stars with periodic
    luminosity variation.
  • Their periods range from a few days to over 100
    days,
  • Their luminosities range from 1000 to 30,000 L?,
  • The high luminosity makes it possible to identify
    them from a large distance
  • Their luminosity and period are strongly
    correlated. Therefore, we can determine their
    luminosity by simply measuring their periods!

The luminosity of Cepheid variabls are strongly
correlated to their periodicity
12
Cepheid Variables in M100
  • The period-luminosity relation of Cepheid
    variables were discovered Henrrietta Leavitt in
    1912. Edwin Hubble identified Cepheid variables
    in Andromeda galaxy (about 2.5 million
    light-years away) in 1924, and used the
    luminosity-distance relation to demonstrate that
    galaxies are much farther than the stars.
  • There are well over 1,000 Cepheid variables known
    todayfor example, the Polaries!
  • In 1994, Hubble Space Telescope observed a
    Cepheid variable in the face-on spiral galaxy
    M100 in Virgo Cluster located at a distance of 56
    million light-yearsthis is the most distant
    distant Cepheid observed so far.
  • http//hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/
    1994/49/

13
Tully-Fisher Relation
  • Although this is not discussed in our text
    book, the luminosity of the spiral galaxies are
    related to their rotational speed,. This was
    discovered by B. Tully (of UH/IfA) and J.R.
    Fisher in 1977. Therefore, the luminosity of the
    spiral galaxies can be determined simply by
    measuring their rotational speed
  • Spiral galaxies are good standard candles also!
  • The slope of the luminosity-rotation rate curve
    is different for different type of spiral
    galaxies

14
White Dwarf Supernova
  • Every time the hydrogen shell is ignited, the
    mass of the white dwarf may increase (or
    decrease, we dont know for sure yet).
  • The mass of the white dwarf may gradually
    increase,
  • At about 1 M?, the gravitation force overcomes
    the electron degenerate pressure, and the white
    dwarf collapses, increasing temperature and
    density until it reaches carbon fusion
    temperature.
  • The carbon inside the white dwarfs are
    simultaneously ignited. It explodes to form a
  • White dwarf supernova. (Type I).
  • Nothing is left behind from a white dwarf
    supernova explosion (In contrast to a
    massive-star supernova, which would leave a
    neutron star or black hole behind). All the
    materials are dispersed into space.

White Dwarf Supernova is a very important
standard candle for measuring cosmological
distance
15
White Dwarf and Massive Star Supernovae
Because the mass of white dwarfs when they
explode as supernovae is always around 1.0 M?,
its luminosity is very consistent, and can be
used as a standard candle for the measurement of
distance to distant galaxies (Chapter 15). The
amount of energy produced by white dwarf
supernovae and massive star supernovae are about
the same. But the properties of the light emitted
from these two types of supernovae are
intrinsically different, allowing us to
distinguish them from a distance.
  • Massive star supernovae spectrum is rich with
    hydrogen lines (because they have a large outer
    layer of hydrogen).
  • White dwarf supernovae spectra do not contain
    hydrogen line (because white dwarfs are mostly
    carbon, with only a thin shell of hydrogen).
  • The light curve is different.

16
Supernovae from Distant Galaxies
  • These snapshots, taken by NASA's Hubble Space
    Telescope, reveal five supernovae, or exploding
    stars, and their host galaxies.
  • The arrows in the top row of images point to the
    supernovae. The bottom row shows the host
    galaxies before or after the stars exploded. The
    supernovae exploded between 3.5 and 10 billion
    years ago.

17
Distance and Redshift
  • In addition to distance, Hubble also measured
    the redshift of the galaxiesand when combined
    with distances derived from observation of
    Cepheid variables and the brightest stars in
    galaxies, Hubble found that, the more distant a
    galaxy, the greater its redshift is, and hence
    the faster it is moving away from us
  • the universe is expanding!

18
Hubbles Law
  • From the redshift and distance measurements,
    we can express the recession speed V of a galaxy
    located at a distant d away from us by
  • V d ? H0
  • The value of the Hubbles Constant is
  • H0 2024 km/sec / million light-year
  • Once the value of H0 is determined, we can use
    measured recession speed to infer the distance of
    galaxies using the formula
  • d V / H0
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