Galaxy - astronomy.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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Astronomers have obtained images of young galaxies using the Keck Telescope in Hawaii and the Hubble Space Telescope, which resides in an orbit high above Earth’satmosphere and thus avoids atmospheric interference.
Photos from the HST show galaxies that are as far as 13 billion light-years away from Earth, which means theyformed soon after the universe formed about 13.7 billion years ago.
The galaxies appear to be spherical in shape, and may be early precursors of elliptical and spiralgalaxies.
VI ROTATION OF SPIRAL GALAXIES
Stars and gas clouds orbit about the center of their galaxy.
Astronomers believe that most galaxies spin around a black hole, a dense object with such a largegravitational pull that nothing nearby can escape, not even light.
Using the HST in 1994, astronomers found the first evidence for a black hole in the center of a galaxy.In 1998 researchers found strong evidence that the Milky Way galaxy’s center, which is 28,000 light-years away from Earth, contains a black hole more than two milliontimes the mass of the Sun.
In 1999 a group of astronomers showed that the two bright spots at the center of the Andromeda galaxy were caused by stars speedingaround a black hole, the real center of the galaxy.
Orbital periods are more than 100 million years.
These motions are studied by measuring the positions of lines in the galaxy spectra.
In spiral galaxies, the stars movein circular orbits, with velocities that increase with increasing distances from the center.
At the edges of spiral disks, velocities of 300 km/sec (about 185 mi/sec) havebeen measured at distances as great as 150,000 light-years.
This increase in velocity with increase in distance is unlike planetary velocities in the solar system, for example, where the velocities of planets decrease with increasingdistance from the sun.
This difference tells astronomers that the mass of a galaxy is not as centrally concentrated as is the mass in the solar system.
A significantportion of galaxy mass is located at large distances from the center of the galaxy, but this mass has so little luminosity that it has only been detected by its gravitationalattraction.
Studies of velocities of stars in external galaxies have led to the belief that much of the mass in the universe is not visible as stars.
The exact nature of thisdark matter is unknown at present.
See also Cosmology.
VII RADIATION FROM A GALAXY
Knowledge of the appearance of a galaxy is based on optical observations.
Knowledge of the composition and motions of the individual stars comes from spectral studiesin the optical region also.
Because the hydrogen gas in the spiral arms of a galaxy radiates in the radio portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, many details of galacticstructure are learned from studies in the radio region.
The warm dust in the nucleus and spiral arms of a galaxy radiates in the infrared portion of the spectrum.
Somegalaxies radiate more energy in the optical region.
Recent X-ray observations have confirmed that galactic halos contain hot gas, gas with temperatures of millions of degrees.
X-ray emission is also observed fromobjects as varied as globular clusters, supernova remnants, and hot gas in clusters of galaxies.
Observations in the ultraviolet region also reveal the properties of thegas in the halo, as well as details of the evolution of young stars in galaxies.
See X-Ray Galaxy.
VIII ORIGINS OF GALAXIES
As the 21st century began, astronomers believed they were much closer to understanding the origins of galaxies.
Observations made by the Cosmic BackgroundExplorer (COBE) satellite, which was launched in 1989, confirmed predictions made by the big bang theory of the universe’s origin.
COBE also detected smallirregularities, or ripples, in the background radiation that uniformly pervades the universe.
These ripples were thought to be clumps of matter that formed soon afterthe big bang.
The clumps became the seeds from which galaxies and clusters of galaxies developed.
The ripples were studied in more detail in limited regions of the skyby a variety of ground-based and balloon-based experiments.
A more recent spacecraft, NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), made even moreaccurate observations of these ripples across the entire sky.
In 2003 WMAP’s results confirmed the existence of these galactic seeds, providing a full-sky map of theuniverse’s emerging galaxies.
Contributed By:Vera C.
RubinMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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