Size and Scale of the Universe Image courtesy of The Cosmic Perspective by Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, & Voit; Addison Wesley, 2002.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Size and Scale of the Universe
Advertisements

The Size, Scale and Structure of the Universe
Size and Scale of the Universe What is your Cosmic Address? # Street City State Country Continent Hemisphere Planet …
The Milky Way Galaxy part 2
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 20 Galaxies and the Foundation of Modern Cosmology.
July 21, 2004 Tea Break It took Voyager 20 years to get to Pluto. At the same speed, how long does it take to get to the nearest star? How long will it.
Galaxies What is a galaxy? How many stars are there in an average galaxy? About how many galaxies are there in the universe? What is the name of our galaxy?
Galaxies What is a galaxy? How many stars are there in an average galaxy? About how many galaxies are there in the universe? What is the name of our galaxy?
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 20 Galaxies and the Foundation of Modern Cosmology.
Galaxies What is a galaxy? How many stars are there in an average galaxy? About how many galaxies are there in the universe? What is the name of our galaxy?
Galaxies Chapter Twenty-Six. Guiding Questions How did astronomers first discover other galaxies? How did astronomers first determine the distances to.
Astronomy class: Pages 2-9
Chapter 12. Final Exam Update Dec. 11 th,2013 Three parts: Part I : test SLO 5 questions. Part II: test SLO 5 questions Part III: Ch. 10,11,12,13,14.
Part 5: The Galaxy and the Universe In this final part of the course, we will: 1. Look at the big spatial picture: Are there organizations of stars? What.
From Here to The Dawn of Time A. Herrold. To the edge of the solar system The orbit of Neptune is not at the edge of the solar system Past the planets.
Unit 1 Lesson 1 Structure of the Universe
Unit 2 Lesson 1 Structure of the Universe
Chapter 1 Introduction to Astronomy. What is Astronomy? Astronomy is the scientific study of celestial bodies. Astrology is a group of beliefs and schools.
PHYS 205 Galaxies Where we live: Milkyway Galaxy Orion Arm System of Sol Third Planet.
… but the equilibrium is unstable. In order to prevent the universe from either expanding or contracting, Einstein introduced a scalar field.
The Structure of the Universe All held together by gravitational forces.
The Universe and Galaxies
Unit 11, Chapter 32 Integrated Science. Unit Eleven: Astronomy 32.1 Stars 32.2 Galaxies and the Universe Chapter 32 The Universe.
UNIT NINE: Matter and Motion in the Universe  Chapter 26 The Solar System  Chapter 27 Stars  Chapter 28 Exploring the Universe.
Galaxies Chapter 16. Topics Types of galaxies Dark Matter Distances to galaxies Speed of galaxies Expansion of the universe and Hubble’s law.
Unit Stars and the Universe. Stars A star is a giant, hot ball of gas. Stars generate light and heat through nuclear reactions. They are powered by the.
Unit 2 Lesson 1 Structure of the Universe
Galaxies Stellar Neighborhoods. What are Galaxies? Galaxies are –Huge –Held together by gravity –Comprised of… Stars Objects that orbit those stars The.
Galaxies GALAXY -comes from the ancient Greeks and their word for “milk”- galactos.
Chapter 20 Galaxies And the Foundation of Modern Cosmology.
The Stars Chapter 14 Great Idea: The Sun and other stars use nuclear fusion reactions to convert mass into energy. Eventually, when a star’s nuclear fuel.
January 2nd 2013 Objective Warm-Up
What is the structure of the universe? The universe consists of super clusters of galaxies separated by vast, bubble-shaped voids. Each super cluster consists.
Our Place in Space Where we are 1. We live on Earth 2 Welcome to Earf!
THE MILKY WAY Intro Info.
Introduction to Galaxies 5/23/2013. BR: Milky Way Scale The Milky Way has a diameter of approximately 8.25 x 10 9 AU (8.25 billion AU). 206,265 AU = 3.26.
Galaxy Dynamics Lab 11. The areas of the sky covered by various surveys.
The Universe planets planets moons moons stars stars solar systems solar systems galaxies galaxies nebulae nebulae empty space empty space more? more?
Welcome To….. The Trick is to Pick!. THE SUN Sun vs. Earth  Answers  A. 109 times smaller  B. The Earth Stress Ball Over 1 million Earths would fit.
The Big Bang – Formation of The Universe. The universe Definition- all of space and everything in it.
H205 Cosmic Origins  Today: Galaxies (Ch. 20)  Wednesday: Galaxy Evolution (Ch. 21)  EP 4 & Reflection 1 on Wednesday APOD.
Universe Tenth Edition Chapter 23 Galaxies Roger Freedman Robert Geller William Kaufmann III.
7.2 Galaxies pp
Planet A large, round celestial object that travels around a star – example: Earth.
The Universe & Galaxies Key Point (Std 8-4.9): Recall the Sun’s position in the universe, the shapes and composition of galaxies, and the distance measurement.
Option E.1 Introduction to the Universe. Collection of planets, moons, asteroids, comets, and other rocky objects travelling in elliptical orbits around.
July 21, 2004 Topics of the Day The Electromagnetic Spectrum (1 hour) –Everyday detectors and Shields Powers of Ten Size and Scale of the Universe (.5.
July 21, 2004 NASA SEU Educator Ambassador Training 2004 Brought to you by Sonoma State University NASA Education and Public Outreach Group.
Light: An Introduction
Unit 1 Lesson 1 Structure of the Universe
Astronomy – the Study of the Universe
Our Solar System.
Size and Scale of the Universe
Cosmic Survey History of the Universe
Size and Scale of the Universe
What is your Cosmic Address?
The Universe.
Astronomy-Part 1 Notes The Structure of the Universe
SIZE and Scale Of The Universe
Structure of the Universe
Unit 2 Lesson 1 Structure of the Universe
Winner of several awards
Integrated Science.
ALL space and everything that is in it.
Perspectives on Our Solar System Introduction: ‘Our’ Place
The Universe and Galaxies
Size and Scale of the Universe
Introduce.
The Solar System, Galaxies, and Universe
Presentation transcript:

Size and Scale of the Universe Image courtesy of The Cosmic Perspective by Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, & Voit; Addison Wesley, 2002

Earth Planet where we all live Comprised primarily of rock Spherical in shape 12,700 km in diameter It would take 17 days to circumnavigate the globe driving a car at 100 km/hr At the speed of light, it would take 0.13 seconds to go all the way around Earth.

Sun Star that Earth orbits Composed primarily of hydrogen and helium gas Uses nuclear fusion in its core to generate heat and light to allow itself to resist the crushing weight of its own mass Spherical in shape 1.39 Million km in diameter

Earth & Sun The Sun’s diameter is 109 times greater than that of Earth Over 1 million Earths would fit inside the Sun’s volume Earth orbits the Sun at an average distance of 150 million kilometers. This distance is called an Astronomical Unit (AU) It would take 11,780 Earths lined up side to side to bridge the 1 AU between Earth and Sun.

The Solar System 8.5 planets, thousands and thousands of planetoids and asteroids, billions of comets and meteoroids Mostly distributed in a disk about the Sun Sun blows a constant wind of charged gas into interplanetary space, called the Solar Wind Boundary between Solar Wind and interstellar space at 100 AU from the Sun (200 AU diameter)

The Solar Neighborhood The region of the Galaxy within about 32.6 light- years of the Sun (65 light- years diameter) is considered its neighborhood. Here stars move generally with the Sun in its orbit around the center of the Galaxy This region is inside a large bubble of hot interstellar gas called the Local Bubble. Here the gas temperature is about 1 million degrees Kelvin and the density is 1000 times less than average interstellar space. Direction of Galactic Rotation To Center of Galaxy The image is 390 light-years across.

You Are Here The Milky Way Galaxy is a giant disk of stars 160,000 light-years across and 1,000 light-years thick. There are over 100 Billion stars in the Milky Way The Spiral arms are only 5% more dense than average, and are the locations of new star formation The Sun is located at the edge of a spiral arm, 30,000 light-years from the center It takes 250 Million years for the Sun to complete one orbit The Milky Way Galaxy

The Local Group Contains 3 large spiral galaxies--Milky Way, Andromeda (M31), and Triangulum (M33)—plus a few dozen dwarf galaxies with elliptical or irregular shapes. Gravitationally bound together—orbiting about a common center of mass Ellipsoidal in shape About 6.5 million light-years in diameter

The Local Supercluster A cluster of many groups and clusters of galaxies Largest cluster is the Virgo cluster containing over a thousand galaxies. Clusters and groups of galaxies are gravitationally bound together, however the clusters and groups spread away from each other as the Universe expands. The Local Supercluster gets bigger with time It has a flattened shape The Local Group is on the edge of the majority of galaxies The Local Supercluster is about 130 Million light-years across

The Universe 1.3 Billion light-years Surveys of galaxies reveal a web-like or honeycomb structure to the Universe Great walls and filaments of matter surrounding voids containing no galaxies Probably 100 Billion galaxies in the Universe The plane of the Milky Way Galaxy obscures our view of what lies beyond. This creates the wedge-shaped gaps in all-sky galaxy surveys such as those shown here.

The Universe Computer Simulation The observable Universe is 27 Billion light-years in diameter.

1) The Standard Ruler Use knowledge of physical and/or geometric properties of an object to relate an angular size with a physical size to determine distance. Ex: Parallax, Moving Clusters, Time Delays, Water MASERs Considered to be a direct or absolute measurement. There are two basic methods for measuring astronomical distances R d  d = R/Tan()  R/

Trigonometric Parallax Requires very precise measurements of stellar positions, and long baselines Need telescopes with high resolution, and must observe over several years. Hipparchos satellite measured distances to tens of thousands of stars within 1,500 light-years of the Sun.

2) The Standard Candle Use knowledge of physical and/or empirical properties of an object to determine its Luminosity, which yields distance via the Inverse Square Law of Light. Ex: Cepheid Variables, Supernovae, TRGB, Tully-Fisher Considered to be relative until tied to an absolute calibration. b = L/4d 2

Cepheid Variable Stars There is a kind of giant star whose surface pulsates in and out with a regular period. That period of pulsation is related to the Luminosity of the star. LMC contains hundreds of known Cepheids all at the same distance. Which allows for robust determination of the Period Luminosity Relationship.

To measure cosmological distances a ladder of methods is used to reach further out into the Universe. Each “rung” in the ladder of distance measuring methods depends on the calibration of the methods “below.”