Universe: Stars And Galaxies
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781319115098
Author: Roger Freedman, Robert Geller, William J. Kaufmann
Publisher: W. H. Freeman
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Chapter 23, Problem 27Q
To determine
(a)
The distance to the Hercules Cluster using the Hubble’s law.
To determine
(b)
The way, the distance found to the Hercules Cluster using the Hubble’s law would be different if the Hubble constant had a smaller and a larger value.
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given:
a (distance to center of galaxy in AU) = 1,717,914,439 AU
P (suns orbital period in years) = 203,782,828.3 years
M (mass of milky way galaxy in solar masses) = 1.22 x 10^11 Msun
Question:
Assume the Milky Way Galaxy is made up entirely of stars like the Sun, i.e. on average each star has the mass of 1 MSun. Under this assumption, approximately how many stars are there in our galaxy? Express this answer in billions of stars (1 billion = 109).
The Kormendy relation for ellipticals can be written as
He = 20.2+ 3.0 log R.
where R. is the half-light radius (in kpc) and 4e is the surface brightness (in magnitudes per square arc second) at R..
An elliptical galaxy obeying this relation will have a total luminosity
Lo R
for some index 7. What is the correct value of n?
O a. n=-6/5
O b. n= 4/5
T23D
Oc n= 16/5
O d. n cannot be determined with the information we have.
In the reading, you were told that there were roughly 10,000 galaxies in the image of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field alone. The image is roughly 10 square arcminutes and there are roughly 1.5*10^8 square arcminutes composing the entire sky. With that in mind and assuming that the Hubble Ultra Deep Field represents an average part of the sky, roughly how many galaxies may exist in the observable universe? (Please include commas for every factor of 1,000; for example 2,343,567,890)
Chapter 23 Solutions
Universe: Stars And Galaxies
Ch. 23 - Prob. 1QCh. 23 - Prob. 2QCh. 23 - Prob. 3QCh. 23 - Prob. 4QCh. 23 - Prob. 5QCh. 23 - Prob. 6QCh. 23 - Prob. 7QCh. 23 - Prob. 8QCh. 23 - Prob. 9QCh. 23 - Prob. 10Q
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- Based on your analysis of galaxies in Table 26.1, is there a correlation between the population of stars and the quantity of gas or dust? Explain why this might be.arrow_forwardThe best parallaxes obtained with Hipparcos have an accuracy of 0.001 arcsec. If you want to measure the distance to a star with an accuracy of 10%, its parallax must be 10 times larger than the typical error. How far away can you obtain a distance that is accurate to 10% with Hipparcos data? The disk of our Galaxy is 100,000 light-years in diameter. What fraction of the diameter of the Galaxy’s disk is the distance for which we can measure accurate parallaxes?arrow_forward= 2. Using a Hubble constant of Ho 70 km/s/Mpc, find the distance to the galaxy cluster that moves with a velocity of 6500 km/s. Give your answer in megaparsecs and light-years.arrow_forward
- How astronomers determine the distance of a galaxy? Explain.arrow_forwardApproximate values of length (in meters) 107 Diameter of Earth 1011 Distance from Earth to Sun 1016 Distance traveled by light in one year 1021 Diameter of the Milky Way Galaxy 1022 Distance from Earth to the nearest galaxy 1025 Distance from Earth to the edge of the known universearrow_forwardOur galaxy is approximately 100,000 light years in diameter and 2,000 light years thick through the plane of the galaxy. If we were to compare the ratio of the diameter galaxy and its thickness to the ratio of the diameter of a CD and its thickness (CD has a diameter of 12 cm and thickness of 0.6 mm), what would be the factor differentiating those ratios? Put differently, if the galaxy were scaled down to the diameter of a CD, how many times thicker or thinner would the galaxy be than the CD? (For example if it would be twice as thick, you would answer 2 and if it were twice as thin you would answer 0.5 (aka 1/2))arrow_forward
- Indicate whether the following statements are true or false. (Select T-True, F-False. If the first is T and the rest F, enter TFFFFF). A) If we find an O type star in our galaxy, it must be in the disk. B) The nearest large spiral Galaxy, similar in size to the Milky Way, is the Andromeda Galaxy (M31). It is located about 2 million light years from Earth. C) The disk of the Milky Way galaxy is about 100,000 light years in diameter. D) On very large scales, matter in the Universe is distributed in clumps and voids. E) Distances to most stars in the Milky Way are measured by parallax. F) RR Lyrae and Cepheid variable stars are used to measure the distance to nearby galaxies.arrow_forwardUsing our example from the previous unit, let's try to determine the Hubble time for this example universe. You were given that a good representative galaxy receded at a speed of 4000 km/s and was found to be 20 Mpc away. With that in mind, what would the age of that universe be in years (aka what is that universe's Hubble time)? Go ahead and take the number of kilometers per Mpc to be approximately 3.1*10^19 km/Mpc. While this problem may look scary at first, this is really just bringing you full circle to one of the unit conversion problems you encountered at the beginning of this course.arrow_forwardThe Tully-Fischer method relies on being able to relate the mass of a galaxy to its rotation velocity. Stars in the outer-most regions of the Milky Way galaxy, located at a distance of 50 kpc from the galactic centre, are observed to orbit at a speed vrot determine the mass in the Milky Way that lies interior to 50 kpc. Express your answer in units of the Solar mass. 250 km s-1. Using Kepler's 3rd Law,arrow_forward
- If a galaxy is 8.9 Mpc away from Earth and recedes at 497 km/s, what is H. (in km/s/Mpc)? km/s/Mрс What is the Hubble time (in yr)? years How old (in yr) would the universe be, assuming space-time is flat and the expansion of the universe has not been accelerating? years How would acceleration change your answer? If the expansion of the Universe has been accelerating, the Universe could be substantially younger than the value entered above. If the expansion of the Universe has been accelerating, the Universe could be substantially older than the value entered above.arrow_forwardHow would I calculate the age of the universe in billions of years from the Hubble constant (73.48 +/- 1.66 km/s/Mpc)? I know I need to use basic unit conversion but I’m not sure which numbers to use.arrow_forwardThe figure below shows the spectra of two galaxies A and B. Please can i get help with this questions below: 1. Which of these galaxies has ongoing star formation? How can you tell?2. One of these galaxies has Hubble type E3 while the other is SBb. Which is which? What does the 3 inE3 tell you about the galaxy? What does the SB in SBb tell you about the galaxy?3. What effects would dust have on the two spectra?4. Which galaxy would you expect to have more far-infrared emission? Explarrow_forward
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