Notes
Slide Show
Outline
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Astro 1050     Wed. Mar 24, 2004
  •    Today:  More Ch. 12: The Milky Way
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The Period-Luminosity Relationship
  • Relationship discovered by Henrietta Leavitt in 1912
    • stars in Small Magellanic Cloud
    • all at roughly same distance
    • but didn’t have absolute M, just apparent M
    • need absolute M to get distances


  • Calibrated by Harlow Shapley
    • If you can find distance (so M-m) for just one nearby Cepheid, you can convert Leavitt’s “m” scale to the “M” you want.
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Calibrating the Period-Luminosity Relationship using Proper Motion
  • Suppose all planes fly at 500 MPH = 733 ft/sec
    • Observe the angle that a plane shifts in 1 second of time


    • A plane that moves 10 in 1 sec  (900 in 90 sec) is at 42,000 ft
    • A plane that moves 20 in 1 sec  (900 in 45 sec) is at 21,000 ft


  • Works for stars too:  closer stars have faster “proper motion”
    • Can only get average distances using average proper motion, since any given star might be moving faster or slower than average
  • Harlow Shapley found 11 Cepheids with proper motion
    • Used average proper motion, average distance, to find average (M-m)
    • Let him replace Leavitt’s relative “m” axis with absolute “M”
    • Now period Þ M then M-m Þ d
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Globular vs. open clusters
  • Open Clusters
    • Typically a few thousand stars
    • Not gravitationally bound
    • Often contain young stars
    • Concentrated in plane of Milky Way
    • Distributed “randomly” around the circle of the Milky Way

  • Globular Clusters
    • Typically >hundred thousand stars
    • Only contain older stars
    • Are gravitationally bound
    • Not strongly concentrated in plane of Milky Way
    • Not randomly distributed around the circle of the Milky Way – more towards Sagittarius


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The Distribution of Globular Clusters
  • Assume Globular Clusters orbit around center of galaxy
    • Center of Globular Cluster distribution is 8.5 kpc in direction of Sagittarius


    • We are about 2/3 of the way out to one side – so “diameter” is approx. 25 kpc or 75,000 ly.


    • Dust within the galactic plane fools us with respect to distribution of ordinary stars
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The Shapley-Curtis Debate:  1920
  • Are spiral nebulae really other galaxies, or just swirling clouds of gas and dust within our own galaxy?


  • Many spiral galaxies had much larger radial velocities than other objects within our own galaxy


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The Andromeda Galaxy
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M51:  The Whirlpool Galaxy
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Sensing Hydrogen Gas
  • Radio emission at 21 cm wavelength
  • Penetrates gas and dust
  • Requires little energy to excite
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The Structure of our Galaxy
    • The Disk Component
      • Stars, gas, and dust
        • The spiral arms
      • Size:
        • Luminous Diameter ~ 25 kpc
        • Thickness 300 pc – 1 kpc
          • O stars and dust 30 pc
          • Sunlike stars greater

    • The Spherical Component
      • Old Stars, but little gas or dust
      • The Halo
        • Globular clusters
        • Isolated old stars
          • red dwarfs, giants, white dwarfs
      • The Nuclear Bulge
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Disk vs. Halo Orbits
    • The Disk Component
      • Stars, gas, and dust
        • The spiral arms
      • Size:
        • Luminous Diameter ~ 25 kpc
        • Thickness 300 pc – 1 kpc
          • O stars and dust smaller
          • Sun-like stars greater

    • The Spherical Component
      • Old Stars, but little gas or dust
      • The Halo
        • Globular clusters
        • Isolated old stars
          • red dwarfs, giants, white dwarfs
      • The Nuclear Bulge
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Differential Galactic Rotation
  • Stars far from the center take longer to orbit galaxy


  • If all mass is at the center get Keplerian Rotation:



  • If M is distributed, Meffective grows with distance, so velocity does not drop in same way
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The Galactic Rotation Curve
  • Keplerian fall-off near center indicates compact mass at center
  • Flat curve throughout disk indicates much distributed mass
  • Lack of fall-off beyond visible “edge” indicates “dark matter”
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Stellar Population and Galaxy Evolution
  • “Metal” abundance during time
    • “Metals” are elements heavier than He
    • A given star’s atmospheric abundance is approx. fixed at birth
    • Interstellar metal abundance grows with each new generation of stars
      • Red giants and supernova eject new heavy elements into interstellar gas
  • Orbits during time
    • A given star’s orbit is approx. fixed at birth – just plows through gas
    • Orbits of gas clouds evolve with time since they can collide
    • Orbits get more circular and disk-like with time
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Traditional Model of Galaxy Evolution
  • Stars are stuck with their original orbits
    • They plow through gas like bullets
  • Orbits of gas can evolve
    • Gas clouds collide and only average motion (rotation) survives
  • Metal abundance grows with time


  • System starts out with little organized motion,few metals
    • Halo stars form at this time
  • It contracts, velocities average out leaving only rotation
    • Gas collapses to form the disk
    • Disk stars form after this has happened


  • Some problems with traditional model
    • Globular clusters not all same age
    • Gap in ages between halo and disk objects
    • Presence of some metals in even in oldest stars
  • System may have formed by merger of smaller galaxies
    • Galactic Cannibalism
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M51:  The Whirlpool Galaxy
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Possible Origin of Spiral Arms
  • Differential rotation smears features out into spiral patterns


  • But can’t be whole story:


  • Number of times Sun has orbited the galaxy:
    • 10 billion yr/200 million yr
      = 50 times
    • Spiral arms would have been wound up very tightly


  • Something must continuously rebuild them
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Degree of Organization
 of the Spiral Arms

  • Different degrees of organization
    • Grand Design
      Spirals: M51


    • Flocculent (“wooly”) Spirals
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Degree of Organization
 of the Spiral Arms

  • Different degrees of organization
    • Grand Design
      Spirals: M51


    • Flocculent (“wooly”) Spirals
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Tracing the Spiral Arms
  • Arms NOT  obvious if you look at:
    • Old objects like the sun
  • Arms ARE obvious if you look at:
    • Maps of gas clouds
      • 21 cm Hydrogen
      • Radio maps of CO
    • Far infrared observations of dust
    • Young stars
      • O, B stars
      • “HII” ionized hydrogen regions surrounding O,B stars

    • Clouds somehow form in arms , then dissipate between them
    • Short lived objects only get a short distance from their places of birth
      • O stars, Lifetime = few million years,  at 250 km/s Þ500 pc

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M51:  The Whirlpool Galaxy
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Density Wave Theory
    • SPIRAL WAVE rotates with galaxy, but slower than individual stars
      • Like moving traffic jam after an accident has been cleared


    • Gas (and stars) catch up with wave, move through it, eventually reach front
      • Just like cars catching up with moving traffic jam, eventually get through it

    • Gas is more crowded in wave – clouds collapse to form new stars
      • More collisions in the traffic jam


    • There are slightly more old stars in the arm too, because they speed up slightly coming into it and slow down slightly moving out of it.
    • But the best tracers are the things that mark recent cloud collapses:  O,B stars, etc.


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Self Sustaining Star Formation
  • Cloud collapse Þ New stars
  • New stars Þ Supernova after few million years
  • Supernova Þ Shock Waves
  • Shock Waves Þ Nearby clouds collapse


  • Differential Rotation twists pattern into spiral
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Two limiting cases of spirals
  • Grand Design: Density Wave


  • Flocculent: Self Sust. Star Form. + Diff. Rot.


  • In most Galaxies you have some combination of the two
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The Nucleus of the Galaxy
  • Likely Black hole
    • High velocities
    • Large energy generation


  • At  a=275 AU  P=2.8 yr Þ 2.7 million solar masses


  • Radio image of Sgr A
    about 3 pc across, with model of surrounding disk


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A movie of stars at the core
  • www.mpe.mpg.de/www_ir/GC


  • Very cool, and worth a look!


  • This is the best evidence to date for a massive black hole at the Galactic core.  Now essentially “proven.”