270 likes | 499 Views
Neutral hydrogen in the Galaxy. Neutral hydrogen in the Galaxy. HII regions. Orion nebula Triangulum nebula. Interstellar extinction law. Dust in the Eagle nebula. Dust: reddening in colour-colour plot. Calculating E(B-V) from colour-colour plot.
E N D
HII regions Orion nebula Triangulum nebula
Calculating E(B-V) from colour-colour plot Consider observations of a set of stars in the (U-B) vs (B-V) plane. The reddening vector will have a specific direction: which for Aλ 1/λ gives Using this, any star can be de-reddened back to the stellar locus, allowing both E(B-V) and spectral type to be determined
Discussion Question Given that we see emission lines (and hence on-going recombination) from ionised regions, what does this mean for the growth of the HII region? • It will continue to grow for ever, faster than previous calculations, because of the additional radiation • It will continue to grow exactly as before • It will grow to a peak size and then stop • It will grow to a peak size and then shrink again
HII regions Orion nebula Triangulum nebula
HII region spectra Different HII regions can have very different ratios of emission line strengths.
Nebula temperatures (T/104)0.25 exp(-39000/Te) = 2.5x10-7 T*
The Cooling Curve Volume emissivity ε = Λ(T) nH2
Discussion Question When a shock develops in the interstellar medium, a discontinuity of properties is produced. • What properties would you expect to be conserved for material passing through the shock discontinuity? • With what complications?
Supernovae 1A as standard candles for cosmology • Light-curve stretch correlates with luminosity • Correcting for this gives distances accurate to ~5%
The Cooling Curve Volume emissivity ε = Λ(T) nH2
Course Summary 1. Observational Astronomy - Quantifying light (flux density, intensity) - Magnitude system (m = m0 - 2.5 log10f) - Measuring distances (parallax) - Luminosities, absolute magnitudes - Stars as black bodies (L=4πR2Teff4) - Stellar classification (OBAFGKM) - Hertzsprung-Russell (colour-magnitude) diagram - Astronomical co-ordinates (Right ascension, Declination)
Course Summary 2. Main sequence stars - Energy generation (nuclear fusion; tunnelling; pp/CNO) - Escape of light from a star (random walk diffusion process) - Equations of stellar structure (mass continuity, hydrostatic equilibrium, energy generation and radiative diffusion) - Simple solutions (dimensionless variables) - Explained observed main sequence properties (e.g. LM≈3). - Complication: convection - Upper and lower limits of the main sequence: radiation pressure (Eddington luminosity), and degeneracy pressure
Course Summary 3. Degenerate stars - Later stages of stellar evolution (red giants etc; briefly) - Electron degeneracy pressure - Accurately with 6D density of states - Roughly, using the uncertainty principal - Fermi momentum - Maximum mass for White Dwarfs (Chandrasekhar limit) - Sizes, densities and ages of White Dwarfs - Neutron stars and black holes
Course Summary 4. The interstellar medium - Its effect on starlight (extinction and reddening) - Photo-ionisation by stars, giving HII regions - Radiative recombination, and the Strömgren radius - Temperatures and densities from emission line ratios - Propagation of perturbations: sound waves - Shocks: derived conditions of the step-change - Supernova shocks: feed metals back in to new star formation