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By: Mike Malatesta Introduction to Open Clusters
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goals Study the formation of open clusters Find the chemical make-up of certain open clusters view on the techmaun telescopes Study rotation of open clusters?
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Formation - Dust and gas clouds (giant molecular cloud many thousands times the mass of the Sun) -Cloud too big to collapse into one star -same chemical composition -approximately the same age - Many different sizes from 80-100 solar masses - Can collapse because of shock waves from supernovae. - Approx. 1 every 1000 years forms in the MW
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Characteristics All stars in the cluster are the same distance from Earth because their distances from each other are small when compared. Usually dense core surrounded by smaller stars. Core typically 3-4 light years across Stars can extend to 20 light years from the center 1.5 stars per cubic light year
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Classification Tumpler scheme 3 part designation I-IV (strong or weak concentration) Aribic numeral 1-3 (from small to large range in brightness of members) p,m,r (poor, medium, or rich in stars)
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The H II Region Cloud of excess molecular hydrogen gas surrounding recently formed stars 10-20 K Stars massive enough heat and ionize the H II Creates ionization front radial outward from center Front begin supersonic but slow to subsonic as distance increases Pressure from ionized gas causes ionized volume to expand It is eventually overcome by the outer shock from the nebula expansion Radiation pressure from young stars drives gas and dust away
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Full color
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H-Alpha Filter
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NGC 637 color 2x2
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NGC 637 color 1x1 zoom
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distribution H II regions are mostly found in spiral and irregular galaxies In spirals they are located primarily in the spiral arms Density waves cause slowing and condensing of matter Shockwaves
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H-alpha filter 10 min. 10/10/2010 Fsq 106 New Mexico 10/10/2010
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IC 5146 Cocoon Nebula 10 min. Clear Barnard 168 Fsq 106 New Mexico 10/10/2010
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Dark Nebulae Clumps or clouds of dust grains that absorb light and create dark patches on brighter background of the milky way Irregular formation No outer boundary Sometimes convoluted shapes Neutral H2 in outer layer Darker and colder towards center C+ to neutral carbon and then to CO Stability of CO outweighs the rest and is major component of dark areas
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Structure collapse HCN to HNC HNC preferred for chemical equilibrium Less than 1/1000 the light than the space surrounding Heating by cosmic rays Cooling by transitions of internal CO Gravitation works against collisions and magnetic field Gravitational energy released through contraction Gas temperature increases Pressure increases preventing further collapse Dust grains emit infrared radiation which cools the nebula ½ gravitational energy towards cooling ½ gravitational energy towards contraction
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Star formation Small jumbles of dust and gas are attracted by gravity “protostar” Each protostar is one stellar system Most < 1 solar mass Very few up to 100 solar masses. Large role in formation of nebula Collapse very rapidly Initial protostar is 30 times diameter of sun Surrounding dust becomes “protoplanet” Star contracts until heat is produced by converting H to He If hot enough ionizes dark nebula into a bright nebula
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Sources Frommert, Hartmut. "Open Cluster Stars." SEDS. SEDS, 270082007. Web. 6 Oct 2010. http://seds.org/messier/open.htmlhttp://seds.org/messier/open.html "H II Region." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Web. 06 Oct. 2010.. "Chandra :: Educational Materials :: Stellar Evolution - Cycles of Formation and Destruction." The Chandra X-ray Observatory Center :: Gateway to the Universe of X-ray Astronomy! Web. 06 Oct. 2010. Stecker, Michael A. "Barnard-168 and Cocoon Nebula." Michael A. Stecker. Web. 13 Oct. 2010.. Davis, Tom V. "The Cosmic Cocoon: IC 5146 by Tom V. Davis." Universe Today. 07 July 2008. Web. 13 Oct. 2010.. Schombert, James. "Dark Nebula." University of Oregon Department of Physics. Web. 13 Oct. 2010..
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