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The Milky Way and Other Galaxies Science A-36 12/4/2007
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Outline Observing the Milky Way Galactic center Components of Milky Way –Disk –Bulge –Stellar halo –Dark matter External galaxies
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Observing the MW Dust obscures our view Star counting RR Lyrae in globular clusters (Harlow Shapley, 1920) Sun 8 +/- 1 kpc from Galactic center
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Dust Far IR Near IR
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Gas Atomic HMolecular H
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Galactic center What does this mean?
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A supermassive black hole! Stars move rapidly (~1000 km/s) Kepler’s law gives mass: ~3 million solar masses in ~3000 AU sphere Focus of orbits lines up with radio source Sgr A* Radiation from accretion disk Little x-ray emission, but flares give more evidence for SMBH
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Components of the Milky Way
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Disk Band of stars, gas, & dust we see in sky Diameter ~50 kpc, thickness ~600 pc Disks naturally result from collapse Objects in disk rotate: Sun at ~220 km/s Use v 2 ~ GM/r to get mass interior to Sun: 9.0 x 10 9 solar masses
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Disk - star formation Young, Population I (metal-rich) stars -> active star formation in GMCs See knots of SF. Star-forming regions appear blue b/c short-lived, hot O and B stars dominate radiation. Cosmic recycling in ISM
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Disk - spiral arms Mapped through 21 cm Not rotation alone: winding problem Density waves -- compression triggers star formation Blue knots are star formation -- O & B stars
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Bulge Flattened sphere 2 kpc in diameter Not rotating Both Pop I and II stars No O or B stars -> no recent SF
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Globuar clusters Gravitationally bound star clusters ~10 5 stars in sphere of radius ~3-10 pc All Pop II -- oldest stars in Galaxy Some GCs associated with disk/bulge -- relatively metal-rich Most (~150) in halo -- metal-poor NGC 7089 (from Clay Telescope)
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