Chapter 26: Stars and Galaxies
Constellations: star patterns
Astronomers use constellations to locate and name stars.
From Earth, the stars in a constellation appear relatively close to one another.
The constellations visible in the evening sky change throughout the year.
In many cultures, Orion was a great hunter who had two hunting dogs, Canis Major (big dog) and Canis Minor (little dog).
The constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor (big and little bears) were named for them. Indeed, they do swing around the north pole.
Constellations and the stars that make them up are visible with the unaided eye.
However, to see other objects in space, you need a telescope.
Optical telescopes collect much more light from distant objects than can enter the unaided human eye.
There are two types of optical telescopes.
One type uses a lens called an objective lens to collect light.
The other type uses a curved mirror called the objective mirror.
Both an objective lens and an objective mirror form an image of a distant object at a point called the focal point.
The distance from a lens or a mirror to its focal point is called the focal length.
Refracting Telescope: uses a convex lens, which is curved outward like the surface of a ball, to collect light
A refracting telescope uses a convex lens to collect light and form an image at the focal point. This image is then magnified by the eyepiece lens.
Reflecting Telescope: uses a mirror to collect light.
Reflecting telescopes use concave mirrors to gather light.
The twinkling of stars is caused by temperature variations and air currents in Earth’s atmosphere.
Some telescopes use a system called adaptive optics to make images sharper
Radio waves, like visible light, are a form of electromagnetic radiation emitted by stars and other objects.
Radio Telescope: Collects and amplifies radio waves.
There is another way of avoiding the blurring effects of Earth’s atmosphere on optical images. That is to place a telescope in space above the atmosphere.
Spectroscope: a device that uses a prism or diffraction grating to separate light into its component wavelengths.
The light from stars and other objects can provide information about the star’s composition, its temperature, and even how fast it’s moving toward or away from Earth.
The fastest thing in the universe is light, which travels at a speed of about 300,000 km/s in space.
How do stars form?
Star formation begins with a large cloud of gas, ice, and dust called a nebula.
The relationship between the brightness and temperature of stars can be shown on a Hertzsprung- Russell diagram.
A star’s brightness and temperature are plotted on an H-R diagram. Most stars fall on the main sequence. Supergiants, giants, and white dwarfs fall into different parts of the H-R diagram.
How do stars change?
The protostar formed in the center of a cloud fragment continues to collapse until nuclear fusion begins.
Equilibrium is reached when the outward pressure exerted by the emitted radiation balances the inward pull of gravity.
Once equilibrium is reached, the star becomes a main sequence star.
The Sun has been a main sequence star for about five billion years and will continue to be a main sequence star for another five billion years.
When a star finally uses up all the hydrogen in its core, it is no longer in equilibrium.
When hydrogen in a star’s core is used up, the outward radiation pressure becomes less than the inward pull of gravity.
Giant: late stage of a star’s life cycle
White Dwarf: The final stage in an average star’s evolution
Stars that are over eight times more massive than our Sun develop in a different way.
A supernova is a gigantic explosion in which the temperature in the collapsing core reaches 10 billion K and atomic nuclei are split into neutrons and protons.
A typical neutron star is the size of a major city on Earth, but has a mass greater than the Sun’s.
A supernova explosion can emit so much energy that for a short time it can be brighter than an entire galaxy.
Elements with atomic numbers higher than iron are produced during a supernova explosion.
The elements from supernovas form solar systems, planets, and all living things on Earth, including you.
The Sun- A Main Sequence Star
Although the Sun is an average star, it is by far the largest object in the solar system.
Like all stars, the Sun is made almost entirely of hydrogen and helium.
The Sun can be divided into several distinct layers or zones—the core, the radiation zone, and the convective zone.
Photosphere: The visible surface of the Sun that you see.
The photosphere is the layer that emits light into space.
The inner layer of the atmosphere is the chromosphere, and the outer layer is the corona.
The core extends from the center of the Sun to about 140,000 km from the center.
Nuclear fusion occurs in the Sun’s core, producing the energy that reaches Earth.
Above the core is the radiation zone, extending from about 140,000 km to about 500,000 km from the center.
The Sun’s outer layer is the convection zone.
Here energy is transferred from the top of the radiation zone to the surface by thermal convection.
The sun’s photosphere is at the top of the convection zone.
The darker areas of the Sun’s photosphere, called sunspots, are cooler than surrounding areas.
The number of sunspots changes in a fairly regular pattern called the sunspot, or solar activity, cycle.
Intense magnetic fields associated with sunspots can cause huge arching columns of gas called prominences to erupt
Convection in the convection zone causes magnetized gases to flow upward toward the photosphere.
Gases near a sunspot sometimes brighten suddenly, shooting gas outward at high speed in what are called solar flares.
Sometimes large bubbles of ionized gas are emitted from the Sun. These are known as CMEs (coronal mass ejections).
When a CME is released in the direction of Earth, it appears as a halo around the Sun
Auroras take place when high-energy particles in CMEs and the solar wind are carried past Earth’s magnetic field.
Galaxy: a large group of stars, dust, and gas held together by gravity
The stars you see in the night sky are also part of the Milky Way.
Spiral galaxies are disk-shaped and usually have arms that wind outward from the galaxy’s center.
These spiral arms are star-forming regions and contain clouds of dust and gas. Spiral galaxies also have a central bulge, or nucleus, where stars are closer together.
Elliptical galaxies are round and have shapes that range from nearly spherical to football-shaped.
Elliptical galaxies have a much larger range of sizes than spiral galaxies
The largest galaxies are elliptical galaxies.
The smallest elliptical galaxies are called dwarf ellipticals and can be only a few thousand light- years in diameter.
Galaxies that don’t have an elliptical or spiral shape are classified as irregular galaxies.
The smallest irregular galaxies are called dwarf irregular galaxies.
Local Group: spread over about a region of about 10 million light-years in diameter and includes about 50 galaxies.
How do galaxies form?
Astronomers hypothesize that the first galaxies began to form about 14 billion years ago as enormous clouds of gas began to collapse.
The first galaxies that formed tended to be irregular galaxies and were generally smaller than galaxies are now.
Astronomers think that many of the galaxies seen today were formed when these first galaxies collided or merged with each other.
When galaxies are close to each other, the gravitational forces between the galaxies can change their shapes
When galaxies pass close to each other, gravitational forces between the galaxies can cause them to merge.
The Milky Way
Like most spiral galaxies, the Milky Way has three distinct parts.
These three parts are the disk, the halo, and the nuclear bulge.
The disk of the Milky Way is about 100,000 light-years in diameter and contains the spiral arms.
The spiral arms are regions where the concentration of dust and gas is higher, so that stars are being formed in the spiral arms.
The halo is a roughly spherical region that surrounds the nuclear bulge and disk and might have a diameter of 200,000 light-years.
The halo is made of globular clusters, which are groups of stars.
Stars are much closer together in the central region of spiral galaxies than in the disk.
In some spiral galaxies the nuclear bulge is stretched so that it forms a bar across the center of the galaxy. These galaxies are called barred spiral galaxies.
The nuclear bulge of the Milky Way can’t be seen from Earth because of clouds of dust and gas that prevent visible light from passing through.
Energy is emitted as hot gas spirals into the black hole.
The Universe is Expanding
Cosmology: The study of how the universe began, how it evolves, and what it is made of
Hubble discovered that galaxies tend to be moving away from Earth.
Hubble’s observations also showed that the speed at which they moved depended on their distance from Earth.
Hubble’s results could be explained if the universe were expanding.
The Big Bang Theory: all matter and energy in the universe was compressed into a single point, which then began expanding outward.
Initially the universe was extremely small and has been getting larger as it continues to expand.
In 1965 scientists detected microwaves that seemed to be coming from all directions in space. This radiation was predicted by the big bang theory and is called the cosmic background radiation.
The speed and direction of motion of galaxies can be determined by the Doppler effect.
The Doppler effect occurs for a moving source of sound waves.
As the source approaches, wavelengths become shorter and frequencies higher. As the source moves away, wavelengths become longer and frequencies lower.
Many observations have shown that the light from all distant galaxies is redshifted
The stretching of space causes the wavelengths of light waves to stretch and the light to be redshifted. This shift is known as the Hubble redshift.
What is the universe made of?
Stars and galaxies are made almost totally of hydrogen and helium gas, with small amounts of heavier elements.
Dark Matter: matter that can’t be detected with telescopes.
Observations show that there is about five to six times as much dark matter in the universe as ordinary matter.
All matter in the universe exerts an attractive gravitational force on all other matter, including dark matter.
Dark Energy: repulsive force causing the expansion to speed up
There are also enormous regions of space called voids where almost no galaxies exist.
Constellations: star patterns
Astronomers use constellations to locate and name stars.
From Earth, the stars in a constellation appear relatively close to one another.
The constellations visible in the evening sky change throughout the year.
In many cultures, Orion was a great hunter who had two hunting dogs, Canis Major (big dog) and Canis Minor (little dog).
The constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor (big and little bears) were named for them. Indeed, they do swing around the north pole.
Constellations and the stars that make them up are visible with the unaided eye.
However, to see other objects in space, you need a telescope.
Optical telescopes collect much more light from distant objects than can enter the unaided human eye.
There are two types of optical telescopes.
One type uses a lens called an objective lens to collect light.
The other type uses a curved mirror called the objective mirror.
Both an objective lens and an objective mirror form an image of a distant object at a point called the focal point.
The distance from a lens or a mirror to its focal point is called the focal length.
Refracting Telescope: uses a convex lens, which is curved outward like the surface of a ball, to collect light
A refracting telescope uses a convex lens to collect light and form an image at the focal point. This image is then magnified by the eyepiece lens.
Reflecting Telescope: uses a mirror to collect light.
Reflecting telescopes use concave mirrors to gather light.
The twinkling of stars is caused by temperature variations and air currents in Earth’s atmosphere.
Some telescopes use a system called adaptive optics to make images sharper
Radio waves, like visible light, are a form of electromagnetic radiation emitted by stars and other objects.
Radio Telescope: Collects and amplifies radio waves.
There is another way of avoiding the blurring effects of Earth’s atmosphere on optical images. That is to place a telescope in space above the atmosphere.
Spectroscope: a device that uses a prism or diffraction grating to separate light into its component wavelengths.
The light from stars and other objects can provide information about the star’s composition, its temperature, and even how fast it’s moving toward or away from Earth.
The fastest thing in the universe is light, which travels at a speed of about 300,000 km/s in space.
How do stars form?
Star formation begins with a large cloud of gas, ice, and dust called a nebula.
The relationship between the brightness and temperature of stars can be shown on a Hertzsprung- Russell diagram.
A star’s brightness and temperature are plotted on an H-R diagram. Most stars fall on the main sequence. Supergiants, giants, and white dwarfs fall into different parts of the H-R diagram.
How do stars change?
The protostar formed in the center of a cloud fragment continues to collapse until nuclear fusion begins.
Equilibrium is reached when the outward pressure exerted by the emitted radiation balances the inward pull of gravity.
Once equilibrium is reached, the star becomes a main sequence star.
The Sun has been a main sequence star for about five billion years and will continue to be a main sequence star for another five billion years.
When a star finally uses up all the hydrogen in its core, it is no longer in equilibrium.
When hydrogen in a star’s core is used up, the outward radiation pressure becomes less than the inward pull of gravity.
Giant: late stage of a star’s life cycle
White Dwarf: The final stage in an average star’s evolution
Stars that are over eight times more massive than our Sun develop in a different way.
A supernova is a gigantic explosion in which the temperature in the collapsing core reaches 10 billion K and atomic nuclei are split into neutrons and protons.
A typical neutron star is the size of a major city on Earth, but has a mass greater than the Sun’s.
A supernova explosion can emit so much energy that for a short time it can be brighter than an entire galaxy.
Elements with atomic numbers higher than iron are produced during a supernova explosion.
The elements from supernovas form solar systems, planets, and all living things on Earth, including you.
The Sun- A Main Sequence Star
Although the Sun is an average star, it is by far the largest object in the solar system.
Like all stars, the Sun is made almost entirely of hydrogen and helium.
The Sun can be divided into several distinct layers or zones—the core, the radiation zone, and the convective zone.
Photosphere: The visible surface of the Sun that you see.
The photosphere is the layer that emits light into space.
The inner layer of the atmosphere is the chromosphere, and the outer layer is the corona.
The core extends from the center of the Sun to about 140,000 km from the center.
Nuclear fusion occurs in the Sun’s core, producing the energy that reaches Earth.
Above the core is the radiation zone, extending from about 140,000 km to about 500,000 km from the center.
The Sun’s outer layer is the convection zone.
Here energy is transferred from the top of the radiation zone to the surface by thermal convection.
The sun’s photosphere is at the top of the convection zone.
The darker areas of the Sun’s photosphere, called sunspots, are cooler than surrounding areas.
The number of sunspots changes in a fairly regular pattern called the sunspot, or solar activity, cycle.
Intense magnetic fields associated with sunspots can cause huge arching columns of gas called prominences to erupt
Convection in the convection zone causes magnetized gases to flow upward toward the photosphere.
Gases near a sunspot sometimes brighten suddenly, shooting gas outward at high speed in what are called solar flares.
Sometimes large bubbles of ionized gas are emitted from the Sun. These are known as CMEs (coronal mass ejections).
When a CME is released in the direction of Earth, it appears as a halo around the Sun
Auroras take place when high-energy particles in CMEs and the solar wind are carried past Earth’s magnetic field.
Galaxy: a large group of stars, dust, and gas held together by gravity
The stars you see in the night sky are also part of the Milky Way.
Spiral galaxies are disk-shaped and usually have arms that wind outward from the galaxy’s center.
These spiral arms are star-forming regions and contain clouds of dust and gas. Spiral galaxies also have a central bulge, or nucleus, where stars are closer together.
Elliptical galaxies are round and have shapes that range from nearly spherical to football-shaped.
Elliptical galaxies have a much larger range of sizes than spiral galaxies
The largest galaxies are elliptical galaxies.
The smallest elliptical galaxies are called dwarf ellipticals and can be only a few thousand light- years in diameter.
Galaxies that don’t have an elliptical or spiral shape are classified as irregular galaxies.
The smallest irregular galaxies are called dwarf irregular galaxies.
Local Group: spread over about a region of about 10 million light-years in diameter and includes about 50 galaxies.
How do galaxies form?
Astronomers hypothesize that the first galaxies began to form about 14 billion years ago as enormous clouds of gas began to collapse.
The first galaxies that formed tended to be irregular galaxies and were generally smaller than galaxies are now.
Astronomers think that many of the galaxies seen today were formed when these first galaxies collided or merged with each other.
When galaxies are close to each other, the gravitational forces between the galaxies can change their shapes
When galaxies pass close to each other, gravitational forces between the galaxies can cause them to merge.
The Milky Way
Like most spiral galaxies, the Milky Way has three distinct parts.
These three parts are the disk, the halo, and the nuclear bulge.
The disk of the Milky Way is about 100,000 light-years in diameter and contains the spiral arms.
The spiral arms are regions where the concentration of dust and gas is higher, so that stars are being formed in the spiral arms.
The halo is a roughly spherical region that surrounds the nuclear bulge and disk and might have a diameter of 200,000 light-years.
The halo is made of globular clusters, which are groups of stars.
Stars are much closer together in the central region of spiral galaxies than in the disk.
In some spiral galaxies the nuclear bulge is stretched so that it forms a bar across the center of the galaxy. These galaxies are called barred spiral galaxies.
The nuclear bulge of the Milky Way can’t be seen from Earth because of clouds of dust and gas that prevent visible light from passing through.
Energy is emitted as hot gas spirals into the black hole.
The Universe is Expanding
Cosmology: The study of how the universe began, how it evolves, and what it is made of
Hubble discovered that galaxies tend to be moving away from Earth.
Hubble’s observations also showed that the speed at which they moved depended on their distance from Earth.
Hubble’s results could be explained if the universe were expanding.
The Big Bang Theory: all matter and energy in the universe was compressed into a single point, which then began expanding outward.
Initially the universe was extremely small and has been getting larger as it continues to expand.
In 1965 scientists detected microwaves that seemed to be coming from all directions in space. This radiation was predicted by the big bang theory and is called the cosmic background radiation.
The speed and direction of motion of galaxies can be determined by the Doppler effect.
The Doppler effect occurs for a moving source of sound waves.
As the source approaches, wavelengths become shorter and frequencies higher. As the source moves away, wavelengths become longer and frequencies lower.
Many observations have shown that the light from all distant galaxies is redshifted
The stretching of space causes the wavelengths of light waves to stretch and the light to be redshifted. This shift is known as the Hubble redshift.
What is the universe made of?
Stars and galaxies are made almost totally of hydrogen and helium gas, with small amounts of heavier elements.
Dark Matter: matter that can’t be detected with telescopes.
Observations show that there is about five to six times as much dark matter in the universe as ordinary matter.
All matter in the universe exerts an attractive gravitational force on all other matter, including dark matter.
Dark Energy: repulsive force causing the expansion to speed up
There are also enormous regions of space called voids where almost no galaxies exist.