The Interstellar Medium Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 19
The Stuff Between the Stars Called the interstellar medium (ISM) Gas Accounts for most of the volume Dust Account for most of the opacity
Gas Modest amounts of C,N,O and other “medium” elements Heavier elements have condensed to form the dust How gas looks depends on the amount of external radiation
Radiation Environment Amount of radiation depends on: High mass O and B stars produce a lot of high energy radiation (UV) The inner part of a dense cloud is shielded from most external radiation
Three Kinds of Hydrogen Molecular clouds Form where thick dust layers shield hydrogen HI regions Form where radiation is weak HII regions Form where there is a lot of radiation
Dust If the ISM was all gas, you could see right through it Dust particles are small (~1 micron = 1 millionth of a meter) Some different types of dust: Medium silicate grains All these different types identified from complex absorption properties
Extinction Curve
What Does Dust Do? Absorption This causes interstellar extinction Stars behind the cloud look fainter Scattering Dust scatters blue light better than red Causes reddening (only red light gets through) Stars behind the cloud look redder
Reddening in the ISM
Extinction m = M + 5logd A A is the extinction Can find the distance to a star if we know absolute (M) and apparent (m) magnitudes d = 10 X X = (m-M+5-A)/5 Remember d is in parsecs
Nebulae What is a nebula? We now use the term to refer to any part of the ISM in general There are three basic types of nebulae, each with a distinct appearance based on the way it interacts with light
Dark Nebulae Clouds that are dense with dust can completely block out the light of stars behind them Can see stars in front of the cloud projected on it Often associated with molecular clouds
Emission Nebulae If a cloud is near bright high mass stars it may shine as an emission nebula The UV light ionizes the gas Like a florescent light The transitions are of the hydrogen Balmer series and so the nebula looks red or pink Emission nebulae are HII regions
Reflection Nebulae Dust preferentially scatters blue light Same reason sky is blue Need bright star fairly near-by to produce effect
Multiwavelength ISM Radio Neutral hydrogen emits at a wavelength of 21cm Millimeter For viewing molecular clouds Some are very complex and must be protected from UV radiation
More Multiwavelength ISM Infrared Dust is cold (<100K or -150 C), and shines directly in IR X-ray For viewing coronal gas Formed from supernova Fills most of the space of the galaxy
Structure of ISM We may be looking through many clouds when we view a star The sun is actually in a large region of hot gas called the local bubble The denser parts of the ISM are the sites of star formation
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