Contact Information • Mike Skrutskie – mfs4n - 924-4328 • Room 262 – Astronomy Building – Office Hours: • Monday 1:30 – 2:30 • Thursday 10:30 – 12:00 Room 262 Astronomy (my office) if those don't work contact me for arrangements • Course TA – Kim Sokal - krs9tb • Room 267 Astronomy Building • By appointment
58
Embed
Contact Information - Faculty Web Sites at the … Galaxy (the Milky Way) in Perspective: How do we fit in? Galaxies, collections of billions of stars assembled and bound by gravity,
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Our Galaxy (the Milky Way) in Perspective: How do we fit in?
The Sun is embedded in the Milky Way (far from the center).
− We have a myopic perspective.
− The Milky Way is thin and flat, yet we see a lumpy diffuse band across the sky because of our proximity.
Our Galaxy (the Milky Way) in Perspective: How do we fit in?
The Sun is embedded in the Milky Way (far from the center).
− We have a myopic perspective.
− The Milky Way is thin and flat, yet we see a lumpy diffuse band across the sky because of our proximity.
Our Galaxy (the Milky Way) in Perspective: How do we fit in?
The Sun is embedded in the Milky Way (far from the center).
− We have a myopic perspective.
− The Milky Way is thin and flat, yet we see a lumpy diffuse band across the sky because of our proximity.
Aitoff Projection
Our Galaxy (the Milky Way) in Perspective: How do we fit in?
Infrared light penetrates dust better than visible light. − An infrared view of the Milky Way reveals the real Galaxy.
Astronomy: A Search for Structure? Hierarchical structure in the Universe leads to
an extended mailing address.....
Earth
The Solar System (in capital letters)
The Milky Way Galaxy
The Local Group
The Local Supercluster
The Universe
● Implicit in understanding this structure is knowing how far away things actually are.... not an easy task!
Understanding Structure: Divining Depth
Understanding Structure: Divining Depth
Understanding Structure: Divining Depth
Still, we are focusing on phenomenology....
Astronomy: A Search for Origins!!!
Where did all the structure and organization come from? How did it emerge over time? What were the starting conditions? What physical processes were important?
− We wish to explain, not just observe.
Astronomy: A Search for Origins!!!
Where did all the structure and organization come from? How did it emerge over time? What physics/physical processes were important?
Hydrogen + Helium + Gravity ⇨ Stars, Galaxies, and Humans
given about 14 billion years.
A Five-Minute History of the Universe The “Big Bang” brings matter, space and time into existence.
− It happened 13.7 billion years ago.
» - a number now known to better than 1 percent!− The early Universe contained only uniformly distributed Hydrogen
and Helium.
Almost immediately gravity begins to form stars and galaxies.− Stars “process” Hydrogen and Helium into heavier elements like
Iron, Calcium, and Oxygen.
After 9 billion years of cosmic recycling (4.6 billion years ago) our Sun forms from the “ashes” for previous generations of stars.
− At the same time system of planets form from debris left in orbit around the Sun.
Life originates quickly on Earth.− but only becomes “complex” ½ billion years ago.
Lecture outline: A Brief Brief History of the Universe
− A human lifetime is a blink of the eye relative to the timescale of cosmic events.
• - Going back to that cosmic year, a human lifetime is about 2 one-hundredths of a second.
»
− Stars and galaxies change incredibly slowly by comparison.
− Astronomers must reconstruct the workings of the Universe from this “snapshot” view.
The Astronomer's task is similar to asking an alien anthropologist to reconstruct the intricacies of human relationships and politics from a snapshot of the events happening on Earth at one instant.
− A human lifetime is a blink of the eye relative to the timescale of cosmic events.
− Astronomers must reconstruct the workings of the Universe from this “snapshot” view.
This task is similar to reconstructing the intricacies of human relationships and politics from a snapshot of the events happening on Earth at one instant.
Astronomers have two powerful tools to address this shortcoming
− Light travels “slowly”. A stale view of the universe permits Astronomers to look back in time.
“Lookback” Time Light takes time to get from one place to another.
− Light travels at a speed of 300,000 km/s
The travel time is instantaneous for most everyday experience where distances are small.
Travel time becomes important for more distant objects Light takes just over a second to get to the Moon
(400,000 kilometers away). In a year light traverses a distance of a light-year.
“Lookback” Time
We get a “stale” view of the Universe, seeing more distant object as they were in the more distant past.
– We see the Sun as it was 8.3 minutes ago because the light took 8.3 minutes to traverse the distance from the Sun to the Earth (150 million kilometers).
For extremely distant objects, billions of light-years, the light takes billions of years to get here, bringing a view that is billions of years out of date.
“Lookback” Time We see the Sun as it was 8.3 minutes ago because the light
took 8.3 minutes to traverse the distance from the Sun to the Earth (150 million kilometers).
For extremely distant objects, billions of light years, the light takes billions of years to get here, bringing a view that is billions of years out of date.
− We see the distant universe as it was in the distant past.
Human Biases Time
− A human lifetime is a blink of the eye relative to the timescale of cosmic events.
− Astronomers must reconstruct the workings of the Universe from this “snapshot” view.
This task is similar to reconstructing the intricacies of human relationships and politics from a snapshot of the events happening on Earth at one instant.
Astronomers have two powerful tools to address this shortcoming
− Light travels “slowly”. A stale view of the universe permits Astronomers to look back in time.
− Computer simulation can permit scientist to watch events play out over millions or billions of years.