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Galaxies. Galaxies. A galaxy is a huge region of space that contains hundreds of billions of stars, planets, glowing nebulae, dust, empty space, and possibly black holes. Galaxies began when large clouds of gas and dust started to shrink as a result of their gravity. Galaxies.
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Galaxies • A galaxy is a huge region of space that contains hundreds of billions of stars, planets, glowing nebulae, dust, empty space, and possibly black holes. • Galaxies began when large clouds of gas and dust started to shrink as a result of their gravity.
Galaxies • Galaxies are held together by gravity. • According to Hubble’s Law, galaxies are moving away from one another. • 100 billion or so exist in the universe.
Shapes of Galaxies • Hubble categorized these shapes or basic schemes of galaxies: 1. Spiral 2. Elliptical (nearly circular) 3. Irregular
Spiral Galaxies • Arms tightly wound around galaxy, like a pinwheel • A group of objects in center (stars and possibly a black hole) • Surrounded by a halo and an invisible cloud of matter.
Spiral Galaxies • Rotating – which forms arms • May lose arms and become elliptical • Examples: Milky Way and Andromeda Galaxies
Elliptical Galaxies • Can be round, oval, flattened or spherical • Resembles the nucleus of a spiral galaxy without the arms • Very little gas or dust
Elliptical Galaxies • Mostly older stars • Collect into globular clusters • Examples: Maffei 1, M32
Irregular Galaxies • Neither spiral or elliptical • Disk, but no spiral arms • Caused by the formation of new stars in the galaxy or by the pull of neighboring gravitational fields
Irregular Galaxies • In some irregular galaxies one can see individual stars, nebulae, and clusters • Mixture of old and new stars • Large amounts of gas and dust • Examples: Large and Small Magellanic Clouds
Barred Spiral Galaxies • Spirals with bright bar of gas down center.
Lenticular Galaxies • Consists of bulge and disk with little or no new star formation. • Example: Spindle Galaxy
Parts of a Galaxy • The galaxy is made up of two visible components: 1. Disk 2. Bulge
Parts of a Galaxy – The Disk • Contains clouds of gas and dust called nebulae • In a spiral galaxy, most stars are in the disk • Open Cluster (Galactic Clusters) are younger, asymmetric groups of stars.
Parts of a Galaxy – The Disk • An example of a galactic cluster is Pleiades (M45)
Parts of a Galaxy - Bulge • A large squashed sphere surrounding the galaxy’s center • Contains older stars • Not very much gas or dust • One fifth of the total light comes from the bulge
Parts of a Galaxy - Bulge • The bulge can be used to determine the age of the galaxy • Above and around the bulge are globular clusters – hundreds of thousands of stars bound in a tight spherical swarm
Parts of a Galaxy - Bulge • An example of a globular cluster is M13 (Hercules Globular Cluster)
The Milky Way Galaxy • Over 100 billion stars and possibly a black hole in the center. • Has star clusters, planets, glowing nebulae, dust and empty space. • Older stars and globular cluster near the center
The Milky Way Galaxy • Younger stars and galactic clusters in disk • One hundred thousand (100,000) light years in diameter. Ten thousand (10,000) light years thick • Our solar system is located on the Orion Arm – 30,000 light years from the center.
The Milky Way Galaxy • Part of the Local Group of galaxies with 30 others. (Andromeda is also part of this group) • Astronomers use radio and infrared telescopes to “see” the center of the galaxy • We can’t actually “see” the center of the galaxy because of dust and gas!
The Milky Way Galaxy • The Milky Way is getting larger because it is “eating” the Large Magellanic Cloud. Its stars are being added to the Milky Way. • The Milky Way is falling toward the Andromeda Galaxy and both are feeling the tug of the great Virgo Cluster, which is 50 million light years away.
Andromeda Galaxy (M31) • Can only be seen by astronomers in the Northern hemisphere • 2.2 million light years away • Can see without a telescope, appears as a faint fuzzy patch • About the same size as the Milky Way • Two times more massive than the Milky Way
Large and Small Magellanic Clouds • Can only be seen by astronomers in the Southern Hemisphere • The two closest galaxies to the Milky Way (Less than 200,000 light years away) • Visible to the naked eye
Large and Small Magellanic Clouds • Relatively small and irregular in shape • Only five percent of the mass of the Milky Way • Large Magellanic is being “eaten” by the Milky Way
Messier Catalog System • Charles Messier was looking for comets. • Made a list of star clusters, galaxies and nebula so that he would not mistake them for comets. • Listed 110 objects, including 32 galaxies by 1780. • Andromeda – M31