The Milky Way. The Milky Way: Our Home Galaxy What are the different components of the Milky Way? How do we see those components? What does a map of each.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 15: The Milky Way Galaxy
Advertisements

Stars and Their Characteristics
Introduction to Astrophysics Lecture 13: The Milky Way Galaxy.
CLUES TO THE FORMATION AND EVOLUTION OF THE MILKY WAY
Galaxies and the Universe
The Universe Integrated Science I.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Clicker Questions Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium.
Hubble images a part of the Universe
The Milky Way Galaxy 19 April 2005 AST 2010: Chapter 24.
The Milky Way Galaxy This is what our Galaxy would look like if we were looking at it from another galaxy. sun.
Chapter 14: The Milky Way Galaxy. Even our unaided eyes tell us that we live in some kind of disk structure. We see the Milky Way in the summer time as.
Distances. Parallax Near objects appear to move more than far objects against a distant horizon. Trigonometric parallax is used to measure distance to.
9B The Milky Way Our Galactic Home. 9B 9B Goals Structure of our Galaxy. Its size and shape. How do stars and things move through it? Mass and Dark Matter.
The Milky Way Center, Shape Globular cluster system
The Milky Way Galaxy. The Milky Way We see a band of faint light running around the entire sky. Galileo discovered it was composed of many stars. With.
The Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Galaxy The Milky Way. The Milky Way Almost everything we see in the night sky belongs to the Milky Way We see most of the Milky Way as a faint band.
The Milky Way Our Galaxy Please press “1” to test your transmitter.
Astronomy The scientific study of matter in outer space, especially the positions, dimensions, distribution, motion, composition, energy, and evolution.
Review: The life of Stars. Variable Stars Eclipsing binaries (stars do not change physically, only their relative position changes) Nova (two stars “collaborating”
End of Ch. 13 III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium Ch. 14.
30 Galaxies and the Universe Section 30.1: The Milky Way Galaxy
Galaxies & Star Systems Astronomy 2. Star Systems Our solar system only has one star (our sun); however, most are grouped together to groups of two or.
STARS BY SEYMOUR SIMON. Stars are huge balls of hot gases Our sun is a star, and it is the star nearest our planets Earth and our solar system Other stars.
The Milky Way Galaxy.
Ch. 14. The Milky Way Ch. 14. Ch. 14 OUTLINE Shorter than book 14.1 The Milky Way Revealed 14.2 Galactic Recycling (closely related to Ch. 13) 14.3 The.
Galaxies Astronomy 100. What is a “star cluster”? stars formed together at same time stars may be gravitationally bound together two types: open (galactic)
 Students will be able to determine the size and shape of our galaxy.  Students will be able to distinguish the different kinds of variable stars. 
Unit 1: The Big Picture. What is Astronomy? The study of stars & anything outside Earth –Not astrology…no horoscope reading here! Today we will go over.
Chapter 23 The Milky Way Galaxy.
Key Topics Astronomy Unit. Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory: most widely accepted theory for the origin of our universe billion States that
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Life Cycle of the Stars.
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.
Susan CartwrightOur Evolving Universe1 The Milky Way n From a dark site the Milky Way can be seen as a broad band across the sky l l What is it?   telescopes.
Galaxies Astronomy 115. First, which of the following is a galaxy? Open cluster Globular cluster Nebula Interstellar medium (gas and dust) Supernova remnant.
Galaxies GALAXY -comes from the ancient Greeks and their word for “milk”- galactos.
Variable Stars & The Milky Way
Chapter 14 The Milky Way Galaxy What do you think? Where in the Milky Way is the solar system located? How fast is the Sun moving in the Milky Way? How.
The Milky Way – A Classic Spiral Galaxy Here’s the mystery story we’ll unfold… Fuzzy blobs in the sky – new solar systems, or “galaxies”? Observational.
When Giovanni Riccioli used a telescope like this one to observe a star in the handle of the Big Dipper, he discovered two stars that orbit each other.
1 The Milky Way Galaxy We live on the quiet outskirts of a galaxy of approximately 100 Billion stars. This galaxy, the Milky Way, is roughly disk-shaped.
The Magnitude Scale A measure of the apparent brightness Logarithmic scale Notation: 1 m.4 (smaller  brighter) Originally six groupings –1 st magnitude.
Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In.
“OUR GALAXY” Definition of a Galaxy: a huge group of individual stars, star clusters, dust, and gas bound together by gravity.
UNIT 1 The Milky Way Galaxy.
(there’s no place like home) The Milky Way Galaxy.
Copyright © 2015, W. W. Norton & Company Prepared by Lisa M. Will, San Diego City College Lecture Slides CHAPTER 15: Our Galaxy: The Milky Way Understanding.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Clicker Questions Chapter 14 The Milky Way Galaxy.
Our Milky Way Galaxy. The Milky Way Almost everything we see in the night sky belongs to the Milky Way. We see most of the Milky Way as a faint band of.
Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium
Milky Way: Galactic Structure and Dynamics Milky Way has spiral structure Galactic Bulge surrounds the Center Powerful radio source Sagittarius A at Center.
H205 Cosmic Origins  Today: Galaxies (Ch. 20)  Wednesday: Galaxy Evolution (Ch. 21)  EP 4 & Reflection 1 on Wednesday APOD.
Stellar NurseriesStages of Star Birth. The interstellar medium The space between the stars is not empty.
Nov 19, 2003Astronomy 100 Fall 2003 Next week is Thanksgiving Break. No homework until you get back. On Friday… Exam 2 Grades are posted. Nighttime observing.
The Milky Way Galaxy This is a picture of the Sombrero Galaxy NOT The Milky Way.
Study of the universe (Earth as a planet and beyond)
Galaxies. The Hubble Tuning-Fork Diagram This is the traditional scheme for classifying galaxies:
The Milky Way Galaxy. What are each of these?
“Globular” Clusters: M15: A globular cluster containing about 1 million (old) stars. distance = 10,000 pc radius  25 pc “turn-off age”  12 billion years.
The Milky Way. The Milky Way: Our Home Galaxy What are the different components of the Milky Way? How do we see those components? What does a map of each.
Study of the universe (Earth as a planet and beyond)
The Milky Way Announcements Assigned reading: Chapter 15.1 Assigned reading: Chapter 15.1 Please, follow this final part of the course with great care.
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Simulated black hole picture
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium
Even our unaided eyes tell us that we live in some kind of disk structure. We see the Milky Way in the summer time as we look toward the center (white.
Our Milky Way Galaxy.
Presentation transcript:

The Milky Way

The Milky Way: Our Home Galaxy What are the different components of the Milky Way? How do we see those components? What does a map of each component look like from our point of view?

Stars in the Milky Way At visible wavelengths, we see mostly light from stars. Some of that starlight is blocked by huge clouds of gas and dust.

Stars in the Milky Way At the shortest infrared wavelengths (slightly redder than the visible spectrum), dust becomes transparent, so light from distant stars reaches us more easily.

Dust in the Milky Way At longer infrared wavelengths, we see thermal emission from interstellar dust rather than light from stars.

Radio emission from Hydrogen The lowest orbital of the hydrogen atom is not one level – it is actually 2 levels separated by a miniscule amount of energy. A transition from the upper level to lower level produces a photon at very low energies (radio wavelengths).

Hydrogen in the Milky Way Radio waves are not blocked by dust, so we can see the emission from hydrogen in space across the entire galaxy. Note: the colors in this image are not real. Different colors represent different radio brightnesses

The Milky Way across the Electromagnetic Spectrum

Star Clusters in the Milky Way Open Clusters  Hundreds to thousands of stars  Gravitational attraction between the stars is not strong enough to hold them in the same area of space, so the stars escape and the cluster disappears  Relatively young (<2 billion years) Globular Clusters  10,000 to millions of stars  Because there are so many stars, gravity is strong enough to keep stars from wandering away  Relatively old (up to 13 billion years)

Open Clusters

Globular Clusters

Motions of Stars in Clusters

Open clusters contain stars high on the main sequence. Since those stars don’t live long, these clusters must be fairly young. Ages of Open Clusters

Ages of Globular Clusters In globular clusters, only the low-mass stars are still on the main sequence, so these clusters must be very old (>10 billion years).

Structure of the Milky Way How large is the Milky Way? What is its shape? Where are we in the Milky Way? To answer these questions, we need to construct a 3-D map of the Milky Way, and for this we need to measure distances to lots of stars It also will help if we can distinguish old stars from young stars, so we need to measure ages of stars

Metals = elements heavier than H and He

For individual stars that aren’t in clusters (like the Sun), we can’t use the cluster turnoff method to measure an age. For instance, a lone G star might be young, or it might be 10 billion years old. How do we measure its age? The universe contained only hydrogen, helium, and one other element (lithium) when it was born. Stars have created heavier elements, or “metals”, over time through fusion and supernovae. Some of these metals are sent into space when stars die. The cloud of gas and dust enriched by those metals can then form a new generation of stars. As a result, a star born more recently has a higher fraction of metals, or a higher metallicity, than a star born long ago. So we can estimate the ages of stars by measuring their metallicities. Measuring Ages of Individual Stars

Measuring a Star’s Metallicity If the absorption lines from metals in the spectrum of a star are strong, then the star has a high metallicity, and it must be young. If the metal lines are weak, then the metallicity is low, and the star must be old.

Measuring Distances in the Milky Way Parallaxes can be used to measure distances for stars within ~1000 light years from the Sun; parallaxes of more distant stars are too small to measure, even with modern telescopes. Most stars in the Milky are farther than 1000 light years, so we need another way to determine the diameter of the Milky Way and our location within it.

Suppose you knew the luminosity of a star. If so, you could determine the distance to the star simply from the inverse square law of light. b = L / d 2 where b is the brightness seen from Earth, L is the luminosity, and d is the distance. Any object whose luminosity you know is a standard candle. Measuring Distances in the Milky Way

Pulsating Stars as Standard Candles There is a narrow region in the HR diagram where stars pulsate, getting bigger and smaller (i.e., brighter and dimmer) over time: There are 2 types of pulsating stars: RR Lyrae and Cepheids.

Finding RR Lyrae Stars Pulsating stars are good standard candles because they have a distinctive signature (pulsating light) that makes it easy to identify them. Globular clusters contain many RR Lyrae stars. Since we know that all RR Lyrae stars have a specific luminosity, we can measure the distance to a RR Lyrae star (and hence the cluster containing it) with the inverse square law of light.

When we measure distances to globular clusters with RR Lyrae stars and map their distribution, we find that they are not centered around the Sun. Instead, the globular clusters are scattered about a point 25,000 light years from us, which we assume is the center of the Milky Way. The Center of the Milky Way 100,000 light years 25,000 light years

Shape of the Milky Way Gas and dust clouds, open clusters, and most stars are concentrated in a narrow band wrapping around the sky. So these parts of the galaxy must form a flattened disk. However, globular clusters are found all across the sky, not just in that narrow band, so they must have a spherical distribution surrounding the disk, called a halo. Stars/gas/ dust/open clusters

Size of the Milky Way The Sun is in the disk between 2 spiral arms about halfway from the Galactic center to the edge of the galaxy. It takes the Sun and the other stars in the Milky Way about 200,000,000 yrs to complete one orbit around Galactic center. The Milky Way contains 200 billion stars and is 100,000 light years in diameter.