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23. The Milky Way Galaxy. The Sun ’ s location in the Milky Way galaxy Nonvisible Milky Way galaxy observations The Milky Way has spiral arms Dark matter in the Milky Way galaxy Density waves produce spiral arms Infrared & radio galactic nucleus observations. Our View of the Milky Way.
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23. The Milky Way Galaxy • The Sun’s location in the Milky Way galaxy • Nonvisible Milky Way galaxy observations • The Milky Way has spiral arms • Dark matter in the Milky Way galaxy • Density waves produce spiral arms • Infrared & radio galactic nucleusobservations
The Sun’s Location in Our Galaxy • William Herschel’s observations • The Solar System is disk-shaped • Faint stars cluster in a band extending in all directions • The Solar System is near the galactic center • The number of stars is about the same in all directions • William Herschel’s nemesis • Interstellar extinction • Interstellar dust obscures more distant stars • Dark regions in the Milky Way are obscured, not empty • A telltale phenomenon • Globular clusters surround the galactic center • Spherical distributions of ~ 106 stars • Globular clusters orbit the galactic center • Period-luminosity relationship of Cepheid variables
The Milky Way’s Numbers • Disk • Flat disk ~ 5.0 . 104pc in diameter • Earth is~ 8.0 . 103pc from the galactic center • Greatest abundance of stars • Primarily bright young stars, especially OB associations • Abundant new star formation • Central bulge • Approximately spherical distribution of stars • Primarily dim old stars • Little new star formation • Halo • Globular clusters • Approximately spherical distribution of star clusters
Nonvisible Observations of Our Galaxy • Basic physical processes • Selective scattering of EMR • Short visible wavelengths are scattered most • Long IR & radio wavelengths are scattered least • Development of non-optical telescopes • Radio telescopes • Thermal IR telescopes • Near infrared Wavelengths relatively close to the visible • Far infrared Wavelengths relatively far from the visible • Some benefits • Ability to see all of the Milky Way galaxy • Central bulge • Distribution of interstellar gas clouds
The Infrared Milky Way Far-Infrared View (25 µm, 60 µm, 100 µm) Near-Infrared View (1.2 µm, 2.2 µm, 3.4 µm)
Our Galaxy Has Spiral Arms • Observations of other galaxies • Many disk-shaped galaxies have spiral arms • Number of spiral arms varies • Distinctness of spiral arms varies • Tentative conclusion • The disk-shaped Milky Way may have spiral arms • Observations of the Milky Way galaxy • Neutral hydrogen proton-electron spin-flip transitions • Small energy difference between two possible states • Produces an emission line at the 21 cm radio wavelength • Neutral hydrogen strongly concentrated in the disk • Doppler shift of various nebulae reveals arm structure • Four major spiral arms • The Solar System is in the small Orion arm
Our Galaxy Has Spiral Arms Milky Way rotation
M83 Galaxy at Three Wavelengths Visible Near-Infrared 21 Centimeter
The Milky Way’s Dark Matter • Basic observations • Stars & nebulae orbit the galactic center • Identical to the pattern in the Solar System • Orbital mechanics • Keplerianorbits Speed decreases with distance • Farthest planets in the Solar System have slowest orbital speeds • Non-Keplerian orbits Speed is almost constant • Milky Way’s rotation curve is nearly constant • Sun’s speed around galactic center is ~ 7.9 . 105 km .hr–1 • Sun’s trip around galactic center is ~ 2.2 . 108yrs • Basic conclusion • Most of the Milky Way’s mass is beyond the Sun • The visible mass cannot account for this mass • Much of the mass beyond the Sun is “dark matter”
Possible Forms of Dark Matter • Massive compact halo objects MACHOs • Very dim stars between 0.01 & 1.0 MSun • Gravitational bending of light has been observed • Tentatively, MACHOs account for < 40% of dark matter • Known subatomic particles • Neutrinos, now known to have mass • Weakly interacting massive particles WIMPs • Predicted mathematically but not yet observed • Masses 10 to 10,000 times the mass of a neutron
Density Waves Produce Spiral Arms • The winding dilemma • No spiral galaxies revolve like a solid disk • This is not too far from the case • Any difference in rotation rate tends to destroy arms • All spiral galaxies have persistent arms • Density waves One possible explanation • Waves are similar to those on ocean surfaces • Propagation in slightly different directions • Constructive & destructive wave interference • Constructive interference prone to extensive star formation • Destructive interference prone tominimalstar formation • Waves are relatively short-lived • Many stars in spiral arms are OB associations • Very massive & short-lived at 3 to 15 million years • Only ~ 5% the rotation period of the Milky Way • Very prone to inducing additional compression & star formation
Problems With the Density Wave Model • A driving mechanism to continue density waves • Basic issues • A matter of space Huge distances are involved • A matter of time Huge time periods are involved • One possibility • Barred spirals have asymmetrical gravitational fields • One problem • Most spiral galaxies are not barred spirals • Another possibility • Tidal influences of neighboring galaxies • Types of spiral galaxies • Grand design spirals Classic spiral forms • The density wave model fits these galaxies well • Flocculent spirals Fuzzy spiral forms • The density wave model fits these galaxies poorly
Infrared & Radio Observations • The Milky Way’s nucleus • Extremely crowded with stars • One million stars as bright as Sirius • As bright as 200 full moons • Dominated by a feature named Sagittarius A • Powerful source of synchrotron radiation • Relativistic electrons spiraling in intense magnetic fields • Contains a feature named Sagittarius A* • Thought to be the galactic center • Brightest radio source in its vicinity • The mysterious identity of Sagittarius A* • Not a star Too energetic • Not a pulsar Too energetic • Not a supernova remnant Not expanding • Maybe a small supermassive black hole ~ 106MSun
An historic perspective William Herschel’s Milky Way map Definite disk shape Same number of stars in all directions The problem: Interstellar extinction Dust clouds scatter & absorb light The solution: Globular clusters Cepheid variables give distance A modern perspective A thin disk ~ 50 kpc in diameter Sun ~ 8 kpc from center A central bulge ~ 0.6 kpc high A halo dominated by globular clusters Non-visible telescopic observations Radio l’s 21 cm spin-flip line Infrared Near- & Far-IR l’s Spiral arms Confirmed by 21 cm observations 4 major & several minor arms Dark matter Rotation curve stays nearly constant Much unseen mass lies beyond Sun Three major possibilities MACHOs Neutrinos & other known particles WIMPs Production of the spiral arms The density wave model Constructive & destructive interference Causal mechanism is unclear Asymmetry in barred spirals Tidal effects from nearby galaxies The Milky Way’s nucleus Viewed in radio & IR l’s Sagittarius A & Sagittarius A* Small supermassive black hole Important Concepts