1
|
- Today: Chapter 13,
Galaxies
|
2
|
- Q 1: If the inner accretion
disk around a black hole has a temperature of 1 million K, at what
wavelength will it radiate the most energy?
- Use Wien’s Law: λpeak = 3 million nm K/T = 3 million nm/1
million
-
λpeak = 3 nm
- Q 2: Which of the below sequences shows objects with increasing
densities?
- Density is mass/volume, so...
- Red Giant -- White Dwarf -- Neutron Star -- Black Hole
- Q 3: The black hole in the center of our Milky Way galaxy seems to
be about 2.6 million times the mass of the sun. What is the radius of
its event horizon?
- Rs = 2GM/c2
- Rs = 7.8 million km, which is about 11 times the solar radius and 5% of
an AU.
- Q 4: Assume a white dwarf and neutron star have the same
temperatures. White dwarfs are hard to spot because they are small
(about the size of Earth). Neutron stars are smaller. How much fainter
are they?
- Use Steffan-Boltzmann Law, or just the Scaling law for stars: L = 4πR2T4
- LWD/LNS = (RWD/RNS)2 =
(radius earth=6000 km/10 km)2
- LWD/LNS = (600 x 600) = 360000 times (round to
400000)
- Q 5: Why the "millisecond pulsars“? Because the neutron star:
- 1. Is spinning hundreds of times per second.
|
3
|
- Family of Galaxies
- Properties of Galaxies
- Distance; The Hubble Law
- Size and Luminosity
- Mass (including Dark Matter)
- Evolution of Galaxies
|
4
|
|
5
|
|
6
|
- Spirals
-
Sa
Sb
Sc
(large
nuclei
Þ small nuclei)
(little gas,dust Þ lots of gas,
dust)
- SBa
SBb
SBc (as
above, with BARS)
- Ellipticals
- E0 E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6
E7
(spherical)
(highly elliptical)
- Irregulars
|
7
|
- The nuclear bulge is population II
(old objects)
- So the Sa – Sc sequence is consistent with
little gas Þ more gas
|
8
|
|
9
|
|
10
|
- Distance
- Use Cepheid Variables for close objects
- Other objects for which Absolute Magnitude is known:
- Supernova
- Planetary nebula in certain emission lines
- Use “Hubble Law” for more distant objects
- (Correlation of distance with radial velocity)
- Diameter and Luminosity
- Obtain from angular size and magnitude, combined with distance
- Mass
- Rotation curves
- Velocity dispersion
- 90 to 99% of mass is
“dark matter”
|
11
|
|
12
|
|
13
|
|
14
|
|
15
|
|
16
|
|
17
|
- Galaxies live in clusters
- Rich clusters: thousands of
galaxies
- Poor clusters: Fewer than a
thousand
|
18
|
|
19
|
- Galaxies live in clusters
- Rich clusters: thousands of
galaxies
- Poor clusters: Few than a
thousand
- Fundamental difference between stars and galaxies:
- Stars live isolated lives:
- They are much smaller than distance between them
- They virtually never collide
- Galaxies are not isolated
- They are only slightly smaller than the distances between them
- The can (and do) collide, and interact with gas within clusters
|
20
|
- Stars pass “through” each other, but orbits around galaxy
disrupted
- Gas clouds collide
- Gas stripped away from stars
- Collisions cause bursts of star formation
- Ellipticals may be those galaxies which have suffered collisions
- Spirals may be those galaxies which have not suffered collisions
|
21
|
|
22
|
|
23
|
|
24
|
|
25
|
- Family of Galaxies
- Properties of Galaxies
- Distance; The Hubble Law
- Size and Luminosity
- Mass (including Dark Matter)
- Evolution of Galaxies
|