Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Lecture 11 6/25/07 Astro 1001.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Lecture 11 6/25/07 Astro 1001."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 11 6/25/07 Astro 1001

2 White Dwarfs A White Dwarf is the exposed core of a star that has died and shed its outer layers Very small radius, but lots of mass Large amounts of degeneracy pressure needed to counter gravity The most massive White Dwarfs are the smallest

3 The Chandrasekhar Limit
At 1.4x the mass of the Sun, gravity overpowers electron degeneracy pressure A type Ia Supernova occurs if too much mass is added after the White Dwarf forms A nova may occur as material is dumped onto the White Dwarf

4 Neutron Stars Remains of a massive star supernova
Supported by neutron degeneracy pressure About 10 kilometers in diameter The structure of a neutron star is somewhat uncertain Probably contains a crust and then a sea of neutrons

5 Pulsars Pulsars are neutron stars that emit a very regular signal
As the massive star went supernova, it contracted and strengthened its magnetic fields The first extrasolar planets were discovered around a pulsar

6 Neutron Star Binaries Immense gravitational field means that lots of potential energy is released by anything falling onto the neutron star X-Ray Binaries occur when matter is regularly accreted onto the neutron star

7 Black Holes Sometimes no pressure can stop gravity from collapsing a star The event horizon is the point of no return Black Holes appear to make information be irretrievable Can only measure the BH’s mass, charge, and angular momentum

8 Group Work The Sun is not massive enough to form a Black Hole. However, lets say that by some mysterious process it suddenly collapses to form a Black Hole of exactly 1 solar mass. What would happen to Earth’s orbit after the Sun became a Black Hole?

9 Visiting a Black Hole As you approach the black hole, time slows down and you experience a gravitational redshift Whether or not you fall into the black hole depends on who is telling the story Tidal forces are 1 trillion times as strong as the one that causes the tides

10 Do Black Holes Really Exist?
Theoretically, Black Holes must form at 2-3 solar masses You can detect Black Holes by looking for X-Ray sources Strong evidence for supermassive black holes at the center of galaxies

11 Gamma Ray Bursts In the 60s, we began to detect intense bursts of Gamma Rays In the 90s it was discovered that the sources were evenly distributed across the sky Since then, the Bursts have been traced to massive explosions in distant galaxies

12 What Causes GRBs? If the energy was emitted in all directions, the energy would be millions of times that of an entire galaxy Energy is probably beamed At least some GRBs are associated with supernovae Two types of GRBs: short and long Short bursts do NOT appear to come from supernovae

13 The Milky Way A faint band goes across the sky
Galileo showed that the band was made of individual stars We are inside of the galaxy, so its hard to see what the overall structure of it is

14 Structure Basics We live in a spiral galaxy
Has spiral arms in a flat disk In the center is a bulge of stars The outskirts of the galaxy are called the Halo Also a series of nearby galaxies

15 Orbits of Stars Disk stars go around the center of the galaxy
Also oscillate above and below the disk Halo and bulge stars move around randomly Can be very far away from the disk We can look at the orbits of stars to figure out the mass of the galaxy

16 Galactic Recycling Stars dump their processed material into the ISM as they die Also create cosmic rays Gravity drags the gas together and cools it Eventually large gas clouds are formed, from which stars can form

17 Where Do Stars Form? Stars don’t form uniformly in the galaxy
Stars like to form in the spiral arms of galaxies We say that the arms appear “blue” while other parts appear “red” Spiral density waves are probably responsible for this

18 Galaxy Formation The galaxy formed from a Protogalactic Cloud in a way similar to how stars form There may have been multiple clouds Or, many Milky Way stars originally formed in other cannibalized galaxies

19 The Galactic Center The galactic center lies in the constellation Sagittarius Probably a black hole 3 million times the mass of the Sun Sgr A* Not much matter appears to be accreted by the black hole

20 Other Galaxies There are lots of other galaxies out there
Over 100 billion in the observable universe Galaxies come in many different shapes and sizes All galaxies appear to have formed at the same time

21 Types of Galaxies Spiral Galaxies Elliptical Galaxies
Like our own galaxy Relatively rare Might be Lenticular (no spiral arms) Elliptical Galaxies Red and round Often football shaped Irregular Galaxies Strange shapes

22 Elliptical Galaxies Small ellipticals are the most common type of galaxy Usually contain very little gas or dust Large ellipticals are probably the result of smaller galaxies being absorbed Contain lots of hot gas and dust

23 The Hubble Tuning Fork Hubble came up with a system to classify galaxies

24 Distances to Galaxies Standard Candles Main Sequence fitting
If we know how bright something is and how bright it appears, we can figure out how far away it is Main Sequence fitting Done using the Hyades as an example Cepheid Variables Historically important Period-Luminosity relationship Type Ia Supernovae

25 Cepheid Variables Pulsating stars that vary in brightness
How long they take to repeat their pattern announces how bright they are Used by Hubble to determine how far away galaxies are

26 Type Ia Supernovae The exact same conditions occur for every Type Ia Supernova A star of exactly 1.4 solar masses goes through the exact same process Supernovae are very luminous, so you can use this method to determine the distance to very distant galaxies

27 Group Work A typical Type Ia supernova has a luminosity of about 1 x 1045 watts. Lets say that we observe a supernova that appears to be 5 x watts. How far away is it? Express your answer in meters and in lightyears (example on page 623).

28 Hubble Shapley-Curtis debate was unable to resolve whether or not galaxies were island universes or part of our own galaxy Hubble used a new 100 inch telescope to resolve individual stars in Andromeda Noticed Cepheid variables Was a bit off, but close enough

29 Hubble’s Law Hubble realized that the further away a galaxy was, the more redshifted it was V = H0 x d A few caveats: Galaxies do not obey the law exactly since they might have speeds not associated with the expansion of the universe


Download ppt "Lecture 11 6/25/07 Astro 1001."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google