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Structure of the Universe Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 23
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Quiz #3 On Friday Same format as Quiz 1 and 2 Covers lectures 16-23 Bring pencil and calculator
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The Universe Everything was the same distance from the earth We have no depth perception when viewing the universe We have to somehow find the distance to celestial objects to understand the true nature of the universe
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Early Model of the Universe
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The Distance Ladder We use many methods, each building on the other Each method takes us one step further away, out to the limits of our observations
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Steps on the Distance Ladder Parallax: Spectroscopic Parallax: Cepheid Period/Luminosity Relationship: Supernova Standard Candle: Redshift: out to limits of observation
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Parallax As we have seen parallax is the apparent motion of a star as you look at it from two different points of view From space with the Hipparcos satellite
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Standard Candle A common way to find distance is to use a standard candle We can get a value for the intrinsic brightness or luminosity (L) in joules/second We can then find the distance from: i.e., the closer the object, the greater flux we will will measure for a given luminosity
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Spectroscopic Parallax We can use spectroscopy to get the spectral type of the star We can then estimate its luminosity from the spectral type We know how bright a star should be and then we compare to see how bright the star is
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Find spectral type Read off luminosity from main sequence
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Cepheid Period-Luminosity Relationship Cepheids are bright pulsating variable stars There is a direct relationship between period and luminosity Again, we can get the distance from the luminosity and flux (flux measured directly)
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Variation in Cepheid Properties
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P-L Relation for Cepheids
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Supernova Standard Candles Type Ia supernovae are not exploding massive stars, but rather a white dwarf that accretes mass from a companion until it exceeds the Chandrasekhar limit (1.4 M sun ) All type Ia supernova have the same absolute magnitude are are very bright
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Distant Supernova
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Distance Indicator Limitations Parallax -- Motion has to be large enough to resolve Spectroscopic Parallax -- Have to be able to resolve star and it must be bright enough to get a spectrum
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Standard Candle Problems Cepheids and supernova have to be bright enough to see Can see supernova further than Cepheids Largest source of error is extinction along the line of sight
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Red Shift The spectral lines from distant galaxies are greatly shifted towards longer wavelengths The degree to which the lines are shifted is represented by z We can find the velocity with the Doppler formula:
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The Hubble Flow Spectra of all distant galaxies are red shifted This means that everything in the universe is moving away from everything else The Hubble flow velocity is related to the object’s distance
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The Hubble Law Larger distance, larger velocity The two are related by the Hubble Constant H, through the Hubble law: We can always get V from the red shift, so if we know d or H we can find the other
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The Hubble Constant The Hubble constant is found by plotting velocity versus distance and finding the slope Use the distance ladder methods Megaparsec is one million parsecs Our best determination for H is about 71 km/s/Mpc
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The Hubble Law
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Look Back Time Light is the fastest thing in the universe, but its speed is finite c = 3 X 10 8 m/s For other galaxies we can see things as they were billions of years ago, when the universe was young
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Using the Distance Ladder We can use the distance ladder to map the structure of the universe Parallax and Spectroscopic Parallax Cepheid variables Supernova
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Local Neighborhood We are surrounded by near-by, smaller companion galaxies These companions are a few hundred thousand light years away Companions tend to be dwarf ellipticals
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Local Group The local group extends out over several million light years Most other galaxies are small companions to these two
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The Local Group
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Beyond the Local Group If we photograph the sky, we clearly see places where galaxies are grouped together Clusters tend to be millions of light years across and 10’s of millions of light years apart Supercluster size ~ 100 million light years
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Large Scale Structure
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The Virgo Cluster One of the nearest clusters is the Virgo cluster 15 Mpc or 50 million light years away Local group is a poor cluster, Virgo is a rich one
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The Virgo Cluster
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Hubble Deep Field
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The Distant Universe It is hard to see into the distant universe We can see powerful things like quasars Can see back to when the universe was only 1 billion years old See things that may be protogalaxies
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Next Time Quiz #3 Read Chapter 27.1-27.5 for Monday
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