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Spiral. Barred Spiral. Lenticular. Elliptical. Irregular. Types of Galaxies. Deep Sky Catalogs. Messier Catalog Charles Messier, 1781 110 objects (40 galaxies) New General Catalog (NGC) JLE Dreyer, 1888 7840 objects. Messier Objects. Spiral Galaxies (face on). Sa. Sb. Sc.
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Spiral Barred Spiral Lenticular Elliptical Irregular Types of Galaxies
Deep Sky Catalogs • Messier Catalog • Charles Messier, 1781 • 110 objects (40 galaxies) • New General Catalog (NGC) • JLE Dreyer, 1888 • 7840 objects
Spiral Galaxies(face on) Sa Sb Sc NGC 1357 M81 Bode’s Galaxy NGC 4321
Spiral Galaxies(edge on) Sa Sb Sc M104 Sombrero Galaxy NGC 891 NGC 4631 Herring Galaxy
Spiral Galaxiesvariety of spiral arms Poorly defined spiral arms Well defined spiral arms M33 Triangulum Galaxy M74
Barred Spiral Galaxies SBa SBb SBc NGC 4650 M83 Southern Pinwheel Galaxy NGC 1365
Elliptical Galaxies E1 E4 E5 M105 M49 M59
Elliptical Galaxies Giant Elliptical Galaxies Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy Virgo cluster M84 (right) and M86 (left) over 2 million ly diameter Leo I (type E4) 3000 ly diameter
Irregular Galaxies Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) NGC 4485 (top) NGC 4490 (bottom)
Galaxy Clusters Virgo cluster Fornax cluster
Galaxy Clusters Hercules cluster
Galactic Collisions NGC 4676 “The Mice” BGC 2207 and IC 2163
Galactic Collisions M81 M82 NGC 3077 visible radio
Simulated collisions animation
The redshifts of remote superclusters indicate that the universe is expanding • During the 1920s, Edwin Hubble and Milton Humanson were studying galaxy spectra • They found that galaxy spectral lines were redshifted • They measured the distance to galaxies by finding Cepheid variables and using the period-luminosity relationship • They found that the most distant galaxies had the largest redshifts • This is called the HUBBLE FLOW.
Hubble’s Law slope = 75 km/s/Mpc called Hubble’s Constant
Astronomers measure distances to distant galaxies using supernovae and the Tully-Fisher relation • Standard candle method • If you know how bright something really is and compare that to how bright it looks, then the distance can be determined • Supernovae • All Type Ia supernovae have the same luminosity (M=-19) • Tully-Fischer Relation • The broader the spectral line, the faster it is rotating and the more luminous the galaxy.
Methods of estimating distance • Parallax (up to 150 pc) • Spectroscopic Parallax (40pc-10kpc) • RR Lyrae variable stars (5-100 kpc) • Cepheid variables (1kpc-30Mpc) • Tully-Fisher relation (700kpc-150Mpc) • Type Ia supernovae (1 to 1000 Mpc)
Quasars look like stars but have huge redshifts • object with a spectrum much like a dim star • highly red shifted • enormous recessional velocity • huge distance (ala Hubble’s Law) • must be enormously bright to be visible at such a great distance • Quasi-stellar object • QSO or Quasar
Active Galaxies bridge the energy gap between ordinary galaxies and quasars • peculiar galaxies (pec) • appear to be blowing themselves apart • Seyfert galaxies • luminous, star-like nuclei with strong emission lines • BL Lacertae objects (BL Lacs) • featureless spectrum with a brightness that can vary by a factor of 15 times in a few months.
Radio image of Cygnus A showing a small but very bright radio galaxy in the middle of the 320,000 ly wide lobes
Supermassive black holes lurk at the centers of some galaxies • High resolution spectroscopy allows astronomers to peak at the motion of gas near centers of galaxies • Some galaxies exhibit high-velocity jets of material leaving the center • Observations suggest that the centers of some galaxies are incredibly massive • All of this suggests the existence of supermassive black holes
Giant Gas Clouds (surrounding the galaxy) Intergalactic gas jet Galaxy (which is actually quite large)
Jets of matter ejected from around a black hole may explain quasars and active galaxies
Jets of matter ejected from around a black hole may explain quasars and active galaxies
TONIGHT:Telescope observations • 8:45 pm Tuesday, May 20, after night class (telescopes on the roof) • Weather permitting (looks good!) • Attendance not required, but strongly recommended and will be for credit • If you can’t make it, see me for an alternate assignment
Class Website http://www.hartnell.edu/faculty/kjordahl All lectures from the semester will be available by next week (as HTML and PowerPoint) Catch up on your reading in the textbook!