what’s brewing in the teapot?

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What’s Brewing in the What’s Brewing in the Teapot? Teapot? M7 M6 M8 M22 Caty Pilachowski IU Astronomy

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What’s Brewing in the Teapot?. M22. M8. M6. M7. Caty Pilachowski IU Astronomy. the Milky Way. Introducing. Our very own spiral galaxy. Four Galaxies similar to the MW. Barred spirals. (seen face-on). The Milky Way. What’s in the Milky Way?. Stars and Star Clusters - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

What’s Brewing in the What’s Brewing in the Teapot?Teapot?

M7

M6

M8M22

Caty PilachowskiIU Astronomy

Page 2: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Introducing

the Milky Way

Our very own spiral galaxy

Page 4: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Four Galaxie

s similar to the

MWBarredspirals

(seen face-on)

Page 5: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

The Milky The Milky WayWay

Page 6: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

What’s in the Milky

Way?

• Stars and Star Clusters • Clouds – giant molecular clouds, H I clouds, H II

regions, dust• Nebulae – reflection nebulae, emission nebulae,

nova/supernova remnants, planetary nebulae

Page 7: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Our Local Neighborhood

• The nearest stars are cool and dim, and small

• Mostly too faint to see with the naked eye

Solar Neighborhood

Page 8: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Our Local Neighborhood

• Most naked-eye stars are intrinsically brighter and more distant, within a few hundred light years

Solar Neighborhood

Page 9: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Finding the Center of the Milky Way

The discovery of certain types of variable stars allowed Harlow Shapley to determine the distances to globular star clusters

Page 10: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

The globular clusters concentrate near the center of

the Milky WayThe

distance to the Galactic

Center is about

26,000 light years

Page 11: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Milky Way Milky Way SpecsSpecs A spiral galaxy shaped like a disk

Diameter ~100,000 light years Thickness ~300 light years The Sun is ~2/3 of the way out from the

center to the edge Mass about 200 billion Suns (from the orbits

of stars) The Sun orbits the center of the Galaxy

moving toward Cygnusspeed of ~220 kilometers/secondone Galactic orbit takes ~240 MILLION years

Page 12: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

At visual wavelengths, At visual wavelengths, this region is totally hidden this region is totally hidden from us by gas and dust from us by gas and dust that dim the light by a factor that dim the light by a factor of 10 billion!   of 10 billion!  

The Galactic Center!

Page 13: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

The Galactic Center in the Near InfraredIn infrared light, we can see through the gas and dust to observe many of the stars near the Galactic center.

But the Galactic center itself remains undetected in infrared light – hidden behind thick clouds of dust and gas.

Page 14: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

UH-88”, Courtesy W.Brandner, 0.65” seeing

4’40”

5”

>220 stars in 5”x5”

Gemini N/Hokupa’a-QUIRC (U of H/NSF)

The Galactic Center in the Infrared

Behind the gas and dust are countless stars – and we can see them in infrared light

Page 15: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

The Galactic Center further in the Infrared

Now we can see not only stars, but warm gas that glows in the infrared

Sgr A* is the center of the MW

SgrA*

Page 16: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Galactic Center at Radio Wavelengths – It’s a MESS!

• Sgr A* is bright in radio light!• Supernova remnants• Arcs and threads

Page 17: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

The Galactic Center in X-rays

This false-color image of the central region of our Milky Way Galaxy was made with the Chandra X-ray telescope. The bright, point-like source at the center of the image was produced by a huge X-ray flare at the center of the Galaxy.

Page 18: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Galactic Center Finally Detected in Infrared Light!

• Seen with ESO Very Large Telescope (8-m) and Keck 10-m Telescope

• Bright flare in infrared light

• SgrA* is faint but stars nearby are bright

Page 19: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

SgrA* is a super-massive black

hole! “A supermassive black hole at the

center of our galaxy is adequate to explain the observations that have been seen.”

Galactic Center Research at MPE

Orbit of star S2 (followed forten years) around the central mass is consistent with a 2.6-3.3 million solar mass object within 10 light days of Sgr A*

Page 20: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

What is a Black Hole?

•Black holes are objects with such strong gravity that not even light can escape•Since nothing can travel faster than light, nothing can escape from inside a black hole•Objects of any mass can (in principle) become black holes if sufficiently compressed•How compressed? – depends on mass

radius = 3 km x mass (in solar masses)

•The Sun would become a black hole if compressed to a radius of 3 kilometers

Page 21: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

What is a Black Hole?•Since nothing can travel faster than light, nothing can escape from inside a black hole

•Even in Isaac Newton’s time, scientists speculated that such objects could exist

•Space and time near a black hole become so warped that time practically stops (from Theory of Relativity)

Page 22: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Defining Terms

• Singularity – The place at the center of a black hole where, in principle, gravity crushes all matter to an infinitely tiny and dense point.

• Event Horizon – The boundary that marks the “point of no return” between a black hole and the outside universe. Events that occur within the event horizon can have no influence on our observable universe.

• Schwarzschild Radius – A measure of the size of the event horizon of a black hole.

Page 23: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Exploring the Schwarzschild Radius

•The size of a black hole depends on mass•A black hole can have any mass, from billions of times the mass of the Sun to very small (even your mass!)

0.000010.0001

0.0010.01

0.11

10100

100010000

1000001000000

10000000

1.0E-06 1.0E-04 1.0E-02 1.0E+00 1.0E+02 1.0E+04 1.0E+06 1.0E+08

Solar Masses

Schw

arzs

child

Rad

ius

(km

)

Any object with mass can become a black hole if it can be crushed to a small enough radius!

The graph shows the radius at which a given mass (in solar masses) will become a black hole if all of the mass is compressed into a sphere that size or smaller.

Page 24: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

What evidence do astronomers use to infer the presence of a black hole?

Matter flowing into a black hole emits X-rays before it crosses the event horizon

Astronomers look for massive objects orbiting un-seen centers

The unseen objects must be black holes

Page 25: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

And what do you see if you fall into a black hole’s event horizon?

…the black void is suddenly replaced by an unimaginable array of views.

We don’t know what you may see inside the black hole and, unfortunately, you can never tell us about your discoveries. Any signal you send to us is sucked into the black hole with you.

You are lost to our universe forever.

And within a few seconds, you are swept into the massive singularity at the center of the black hole!

Page 26: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

What would you see if you went right up to a Black Hole?

•The black hole has such strong gravity that light is noticeably bent towards it - causing some very unusual visual distortions.• In the distorted frame, every star in the normal frame has at least two bright images - one on each side of the black hole.•Near the blackhole, you can see the whole sky - light from every direction is bent around and comes back to you.

Approaching a Black Hole

Two computer generated images:

left: normal star field (find Orion’s belt)

right: a black hole has been added at the center of the field

Page 27: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Key Ideas – The Galactic

Center• Powerful radio source• Stars very densely packed• Surrounded by ring of gas of hydrogen

molecules (H2) that is empty in the center

• Central object is small – less than 4 AU• Stars near the center are moving rapidly• Black Hole! – 2-3 million times the mass of

the Sun

Page 28: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Black Holes in the

Centers of MOST (all?)

Galaxies

Left: Image of galaxy NGC4261, 45 million light years from Earth. The orange part is radio signals represented in false color.

Right: Hubble's space telescope image of the center of the same galaxy. It is suspected that there is a black hole at the center of this image.

Page 29: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Supermassive Black Holes

A key discovery of Hubble

Page 30: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Enjoy the Enjoy the Teapot’s Teapot’s

brew brew tonight!tonight!

Caty PilachowskiIU Astronomy

Page 31: What’s Brewing in the Teapot?

Visiting Kirkwood

Observatory

@ IUB• Open Wednesday evenings after dark• See http://www.astro.indiana.edu/kirk_sch.shtml• Call the hotline for open hours at (812) 855-7736• Receive the monthly Kirkwood Observatory

Bulletin by email – request at [email protected]