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ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy The Milky Way

ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy The Milky Way. Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections 0101-0106. What does our galaxy look like?. The Milky Way galaxy appears in our sky as a faint band of light. Dusty gas clouds obscure our view because they absorb visible light.

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ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy The Milky Way

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  1. ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to AstronomyThe Milky Way Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections 0101-0106

  2. What does our galaxy look like?

  3. The Milky Way galaxy appears in our sky as a faint band of light.

  4. Dusty gas clouds obscure our view because they absorb visible light. This is the interstellar medium that makes new star systems.

  5. All-sky View

  6. We see our galaxy edge-on from the inside. Primary features: disk, bulge, halo, globular clusters.

  7. If we could view the Milky Way from above the disk, we would see its spiral arms.

  8. How do stars orbit in our galaxy?

  9. Stars in the disk all orbit in the same direction with a little up-and-down motion.

  10. Orbits of stars in the bulge and halo have random orientations.

  11. Thought Question Why do orbits of bulge stars bob up and down? • They’re stuck to the interstellar medium. • Gravity of disk stars pulls toward disk. • Halo stars knock them back into disk.

  12. Thought Question Why do orbits of bulge stars bob up and down? • They’re stuck to the interstellar medium. • Gravity of disk stars pulls toward disk. • Halo stars knock them back into disk.

  13. Sun’s orbital motion (radius and speed) tells us mass within Sun’s orbit: 1.0 x 1011 MSun

  14. How is gas recycled in our galaxy?

  15. Star-gas-star Cycle Gas from old stars recycled into new star systems.

  16. High-mass stars have strong stellar winds that blow bubbles of hot gas. 10 ly

  17. 1 ly Low-mass stars return gas to interstellar space through stellar winds and planetary nebulae.

  18. Supernovae generate shock waves (revealed by X-rays from hot gas) as they burst into the interstellar medium. 20 ly

  19. 130 ly Supernova remnants cool and begin to emit visible light as they expand. New elements made by supernovae mix into interstellar medium.

  20. Multiple supernovae can create huge hot bubbles that blow out of disk. Gas clouds cooling in the halo then rain back down on disk.

  21. Atomic hydrogen gas forms as hot gas cools, allowing electrons to join with protons. Molecular clouds form next, after gas cools enough to allow atoms to combine into molecules.

  22. Molecular clouds in Orion • Composition: • Mostly H2 • About 28% He • About 1% CO • Many other x molecules.

  23. Gravity forms stars out of the gas in molecular clouds, completing the star-gas-star cycle.

  24. Radiation from newly formed stars is eroding these star-forming clouds.

  25. Summary of Galactic Recycling • Stars make new elements by fusion. • Dying stars expel gas and new elements, producing hot bubbles (~106 K). • Hot gas cools, allowing atomic hydrogen clouds to form (~100-10,000 K). • Further cooling permits molecules to form, making molecular clouds (~30 K). • Gravity forms new stars (and planets) in molecular clouds. Gas Cools

  26. Thought Question Where will the gas be in 1 trillion years? • Blown out of the galaxy. • Still recycling just like now. • Locked into white dwarfs and low-mass stars.

  27. Thought Question Where will the gas be in 1 trillion years? • Blown out of the galaxy. • Still recycling just like now. • Locked into white dwarfs and low-mass stars.

  28. Radio Radio IR IR Vis. X-ray -ray We observe the star-gas-star cycle operating in Milky Way’s disk using many different wavelengths of light.

  29. Infrared Visible Infrared light reveals stars whose visible light is blocked by gas clouds.

  30. X-rays X-rays are observed from hot gas above and below the Milky Way’s disk.

  31. Radio (21cm) 21-cm radio waves emitted by atomic hydrogen show where gas has cooled and settled into disk.

  32. Radio (CO) Radio waves from carbon monoxide (CO) show locations of molecular clouds.

  33. IR (dust) Long-wavelength infrared emission shows where young stars are heating dust grains.

  34. Gamma rays show where cosmic rays from supernovae collide with atomic nuclei in gas clouds.

  35. Where do stars tend to form in our galaxy?

  36. Ionization nebulae are found around short-lived high-mass stars, signifying active star formation.

  37. Reflection nebulae scatter the light from stars. Why do reflection nebulae look bluer than the nearby stars? For the same reason that our sky is blue!

  38. What kinds of nebulae do you see?

  39. Halo: No ionization nebulae, no blue stars  no star formation. Disk: Ionization nebulae, blue stars  star formation.

  40. Much of the star formation in the disk happens in spiral arms. Ionization nebulae Blue stars Gas clouds Whirlpool Galaxy

  41. Spiral arms are waves of star formation. Gas clouds get squeezed as they move into spiral arms. Squeezing of clouds triggers star formation. Young stars flow out of spiral arms.

  42. What clues to our galaxy’s history do halo stars hold?

  43. Halo Stars: 0.02-0.2% heavy elements (O, Fe, …), only old stars. Halo stars formed first, then stopped. Disk Stars: 2% heavy elements, stars of all ages. Disk stars formed later, kept forming.

  44. How did our galaxy form?

  45. Our galaxy probably formed from a giant gas cloud.

  46. Halo stars formed 1st as gravity caused cloud to contract.

  47. Remaining gas settled into spinning disk.

  48. Stars continuously form in disk as galaxy grows older.

  49. Warning: This model is oversimplified! Stars continuously form in disk as galaxy grows older.

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