So I just finished re-watching Crash Course Astronomy - and I didn’t know that Phil had a blog :OOOOOOOO
Welp I know what my next read is gonna be
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I felt that
I mean they are pretty connected, so even if you choose one you’ll probably have to deal with the other.
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Can I have both?
I love that
After my Life of Stars series I’ve been wanting to do one on galaxies. Maybe I will hmmmmm
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A galaxy is a gravitationally bound system of stars, stellar remnants, interstellar gas, dust, and dark matter. Galaxies range in size from dwarfs with just a few hundred million (108) stars to giants with one hundred trillion (1014) stars, each orbiting its galaxy’s center of mass.
Galaxies come in three main types: ellipticals, spirals, and irregulars. A slightly more extensive description of galaxy types based on their appearance is given by the Hubble sequence.
Since the Hubble sequence is entirely based upon visual morphological type (shape), it may miss certain important characteristics of galaxies such as star formation rate in starburst galaxies and activity in the cores of active galaxies.
The Hubble classification system rates elliptical galaxies on the basis of their ellipticity, ranging from E0, being nearly spherical, up to E7, which is highly elongated. These galaxies have an ellipsoidal profile, giving them an elliptical appearance regardless of the viewing angle. Their appearance shows little structure and they typically have relatively little interstellar matter. Consequently, these galaxies also have a low portion of open clusters and a reduced rate of new star formation. Instead they are dominated by generally older, more evolved stars that are orbiting the common center of gravity in random directions.
Spiral galaxies resemble spiraling pinwheels. Though the stars and other visible material contained in such a galaxy lie mostly on a plane, the majority of mass in spiral galaxies exists in a roughly spherical halo of dark matter that extends beyond the visible component, as demonstrated by the universal rotation curve concept.
Spiral galaxies consist of a rotating disk of stars and interstellar medium, along with a central bulge of generally older stars. Extending outward from the bulge are relatively bright arms. In the Hubble classification scheme, spiral galaxies are listed as type S, followed by a letter (a, b, or c) that indicates the degree of tightness of the spiral arms and the size of the central bulge.
A majority of spiral galaxies, including our own Milky Way galaxy, have a linear, bar-shaped band of stars that extends outward to either side of the core, then merges into the spiral arm structure. In the Hubble classification scheme, these are designated by an SB, followed by a lower-case letter (a, b or c) that indicates the form of the spiral arms (in the same manner as the categorization of normal spiral galaxies).
A ring galaxy is a galaxy with a circle-like appearance. Hoag’s Object, discovered by Art Hoag in 1950, is an example of a ring galaxy. The ring contains many massive, relatively young blue stars, which are extremely bright. The central region contains relatively little luminous matter. Some astronomers believe that ring galaxies are formed when a smaller galaxy passes through the center of a larger galaxy. Because most of a galaxy consists of empty space, this “collision” rarely results in any actual collisions between stars.
A lenticular galaxy (denoted S0) is a type of galaxy intermediate between an elliptical (denoted E) and a spiral galaxy in galaxy morphological classification schemes. They contain large-scale discs but they do not have large-scale spiral arms. Lenticular galaxies are disc galaxies that have used up or lost most of their interstellar matter and therefore have very little ongoing star formation. They may, however, retain significant dust in their disks.
An irregular galaxy is a galaxy that does not have a distinct regular shape, unlike a spiral or an elliptical galaxy. Irregular galaxies do not fall into any of the regular classes of the Hubble sequence, and they are often chaotic in appearance, with neither a nuclear bulge nor any trace of spiral arm structure.
Despite the prominence of large elliptical and spiral galaxies, most galaxies in the Universe are dwarf galaxies. These galaxies are relatively small when compared with other galactic formations, being about one hundredth the size of the Milky Way, containing only a few billion stars. Ultra-compact dwarf galaxies have recently been discovered that are only 100 parsecs across.
Interactions between galaxies are relatively frequent, and they can play an important role in galactic evolution. Near misses between galaxies result in warping distortions due to tidal interactions, and may cause some exchange of gas and dust. Collisions occur when two galaxies pass directly through each other and have sufficient relative momentum not to merge.
Stars are created within galaxies from a reserve of cold gas that forms into giant molecular clouds. Some galaxies have been observed to form stars at an exceptional rate, which is known as a starburst. If they continue to do so, then they would consume their reserve of gas in a time span less than the lifespan of the galaxy. Hence starburst activity usually lasts for only about ten million years, a relatively brief period in the history of a galaxy.
A portion of the observable galaxies are classified as active galaxies if the galaxy contains an active galactic nucleus (AGN). A significant portion of the total energy output from the galaxy is emitted by the active galactic nucleus, instead of the stars, dust and interstellar medium of the galaxy.
The standard model for an active galactic nucleus is based upon an accretion disc that forms around a supermassive black hole (SMBH) at the core region of the galaxy. The radiation from an active galactic nucleus results from the gravitational energy of matter as it falls toward the black hole from the disc. In about 10% of these galaxies, a diametrically opposed pair of energetic jets ejects particles from the galaxy core at velocities close to the speed of light. The mechanism for producing these jets is not well understood.
The main known types are: Seyfert galaxies, quasars, Blazars, LINERS and Radio galaxy.
source
images: NASA/ESA, Hubble (via wikipedia)
Max Planck, you absolute boss
Btw there’s always something left in physics to discover. Going from nothing left to discover to quantum theory is a huge leap though, because quantum has PLENTY to figure out.
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Oof
That’s a great explanation of particle physics xD
But really, this stuff is so interesting! I love reading about stuff like this - so good work NASA!
If you liked the four forces governing the universe, you might like this book I just finished reading for the seventh time (Neil DeGrasse Tyson’s “Astrophysics for People in a Hurry”). It talks about these forces and a lot of other really cool concepts, like dark energy and chemistry-related-to-space.
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May the force be with you? Much to learn you still have, padawan. In our universe it would be more appropriate to say, “May the four forces be with you.”
There are four fundamental forces that bind our universe and its building blocks together. Two of them are easy to spot — gravity keeps your feet on the ground while electromagnetism keeps your devices running. The other two are a little harder to see directly in everyday life, but without them, our universe would look a lot different!
Let’s explore these forces in a little more detail.
If you jump up, gravity brings you back down to Earth. It also keeps the solar system together … and our galaxy, and our local group of galaxies and our supercluster of galaxies.
Gravity pulls everything together. Everything, from the bright centers of the universe to the planets farthest from them. In fact, you (yes, you!) even exert a gravitational force on a galaxy far, far away. A tiny gravitational force, but a force nonetheless.
Credit: NASA and the Advanced Visualization Laboratory at the National Center for Supercomputing and B. O'Shea, M. Norman
Despite its well-known reputation, gravity is actually the weakest of the four forces. Its strength increases with the mass of the two objects involved. And its range is infinite, but the strength drops off as the square of the distance. If you and a friend measured your gravitational tug on each other and then doubled the distance between you, your new gravitational attraction would just be a quarter of what it was. So, you have to be really close together, or really big, or both, to exert a lot of gravity.
Even so, because its range is infinite, gravity is responsible for the formation of the largest structures in our universe! Planetary systems, galaxies and clusters of galaxies all formed because gravity brought them together.
Gravity truly surrounds us and binds us together.
You know that shock you get on a dry day after shuffling across the carpet? The electricity that powers your television? The light that illuminates your room on a dark night? Those are all the work of electromagnetism. As the name implies, electromagnetism is the force that includes both electricity and magnetism.
Electromagnetism keeps electrons orbiting the nucleus at the center of atoms and allows chemical compounds to form (you know, the stuff that makes up us and everything around us). Electromagnetic waves are also known as light. Once started, an electromagnetic wave will travel at the speed of light until it interacts with something (like your eye) — so it will be there to light up the dark places.
Like gravity, electromagnetism works at infinite distances. And, also like gravity, the electromagnetic force between two objects falls as the square of their distance. However, unlike gravity, electromagnetism doesn’t just attract. Whether it attracts or repels depends on the electric charge of the objects involved. Two negative charges or two positive charges repel each other; one of each, and they attract each other. Plus. Minus. A balance.
This is what happens with common household magnets. If you hold them with the same “poles” together, they resist each other. On the other hand, if you hold a magnet with opposite poles together — snap! — they’ll attract each other.
Electromagnetism might just explain the relationship between a certain scruffy-looking nerf-herder and a princess.
Credit: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
The strong force is where things get really small. So small, that you can’t see it at work directly. But don’t let your eyes deceive you. Despite acting only on short distances, the strong force holds together the building blocks of the atoms, which are, in turn, the building blocks of everything we see around us.
Like gravity, the strong force always attracts, but that’s really where their similarities end. As the name implies, the force is strong with the strong force. It is the strongest of the four forces. It brings together protons and neutrons to form the nucleus of atoms — it has to be stronger than electromagnetism to do it, since all those protons are positively charged. But not only that, the strong force holds together the quarks — even tinier particles — to form those very protons and neutrons.
However, the strong force only works on very, very, very small distances. How small? About the scale of a medium-sized atom’s nucleus. For those of you who like the numbers, that’s about 10-15 meters, or 0.000000000000001 meters. That’s about a hundred billion times smaller than the width of a human hair! Whew.
Its tiny scale is why you don’t directly see the strong force in your day-to-day life. Judge a force by its physical size, do you?
If you thought it was hard to see the strong force, the weak force works on even smaller scales — 1,000 times smaller. But it, too, is extremely important for life as we know it. In fact, the weak force plays a key role in keeping our Sun shining.
But what does the weak force do? Well … that requires getting a little into the weeds of particle physics. Here goes nothing! We mentioned quarks earlier — these are tiny particles that, among other things, make up protons and neutrons. There are six types of quarks, but the two that make up protons and neutrons are called up and down quarks. The weak force changes one quark type into another. This causes neutrons to decay into protons (or the other way around) while releasing electrons and ghostly particles called neutrinos.
So for example, the weak force can turn a down quark in a neutron into an up quark, which will turn that neutron into a proton. If that neutron is in an atom’s nucleus, the electric charge of the nucleus changes. That tiny change turns the atom into a different element! Such reactions are happening all the time in our Sun, giving it the energy to shine.
The weak force might just help to keep you in the (sun)light.
All four of these forces run strong in the universe. They flow between all things and keep our universe in balance. Without them, we’d be doomed. But these forces will be with you. Always.
You can learn more about gravity from NASA’s Space Place and follow NASAUniverse on Twitter or Facebook to learn about some of the cool cosmic objects we study with light.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
THE LIFE OF A STAR: THE END (BUT NOT REALLY)
In our last chapter, we discussed the main-sequence stage of a star. In this chapter, we'll be discussing when the main-sequence stage ends, and what happens when it does.
In order to live, stars are required to maintain a hydrostatic equilibrium - which is the balance between the gravitational force and the gas pressure produced from nuclear fusion within the core. If gravity were to be stronger than this pressure, the star would collapse. Likewise, if the pressure were to be stronger than gravity, the star would explode. It's the balance - the equilibrium - between these two forces which keeps a star stable. Stars contain hydrogen - their primary fuel for fusion - in their core, shell, and envelope. The heat and density in the core is the only area in a main-sequence star that has enough pressure to undergo fusion. However, what happens once hydrogen runs out in the core is where things start to get ... explosive.
For this, we'll be having two discussions: what happens in low-mass stars, versus what happens in high-mass stars.
~ Low-Mass Stars ~
Low-mass stars are classified as those less than 1.4 times the mass of the sun (NASA). While low-mass stars last a lot longer than their higher-mass counterparts, these stars will eventually have fused all of the hydrogens in their core. Because the core doesn't have enough pressure to fuse helium (as it takes more pressure and heat to fuse heavier elements than less), gas pressure stops and gravity causes the core to contract. This converts gravitational potential energy into thermal energy, which heats up the hydrogen shell until it is hot enough to begin fusing. It also produces extra energy, which overcomes gravity in small amounts and causes the star to swell up a bit. As it expands, the pressure lessens and it cools. The increased energy also causes an increase in luminosity. This is what is now called a Red Giant star (ATNF).
Red Giants grow a lot, averagely reaching sizes of 100 million to 1 billion kilometers in diameter, which is 100-1,000 times larger than the sun. The growth of the star causes energy to be more spread out, and so cools it down to only around 3,000 degrees Celsius (still though, pretty hot). Because energy correlates with heat, and the red part of the electromagnetic spectrum is less energized, the stars glow a reddish color. Hence, the name Red Giant. Due to the current size of the sun, we can conclude that it will eventually become a Red Giant. This could be a big problem (literally), as the sun will grow so large that it will either consume Earth or become so close that it would be too hot to live. However, this won't be happening for around 5 billion years, so there's nothing immediately to worry about (Space.com).
As more hydrogen is fused within the shell of the Red Giant, the produced helium falls down into the core. The increased mass leads to increased pressure, which leads to increased heat. Once the temperature in the core reaches 100 K (at which point the helium produced has enough energy to overcome repulsive forces), helium begins to fuse. This process is called the Triple Alpha Process (as the helium being fused are actually alpha particles, helium-4 nuclei), where three of the helium particles combine to form carbon-12, and sometimes a fourth fuses along to form oxygen-16. Both processes release a gamma-ray photon. In low-mass stars, the Triple Alpha Process spreads so quickly that the entire helium ore is fusing in mere minutes or hours. This is, accurately called, the Helium Flash.
After millions of years, the helium in the core will run out. Now the core is made entirely of the products of helium fusion: carbon and oxygen nuclei. As the fusion stops, gas pressure shrinks, and gravity causes the star to contract yet again. The temperature needed to fuse carbon and oxygen is even higher, as heavier elements require more energy to fuse (because, with more protons, there's more Coulombic Repulsion). However, this temperature cannot be reached, because the gravity acting on the core is not strong enough to create enough heat. The core can burn no longer.
The helium shell of the star begins to fuse, as gravity IS strong enough to do that. The extra energy and gas pressure created causes the star to expand even more so now. The helium shell is not dense enough to cause one single helium flash, so small flashes occur every 10,000-100,000 years (due to the energy released, this is called a thermal pulse). Radiation pressure blows away most of the outer layer of the star, which gravity is not strong enough to contain. The carbon-rich molecules form a cloud of dust which expands and cools, re-emitting light from the star at a longer wavelength (ATNF).
But what happens after the shell is fused? We'll get back to that in Chapter 7, where we'll discuss White Dwarfs and Planetary Nebulae.
It's also important to note that not every low-mass star needs to become a Red Giant. Stars that are smaller than half the mass of the Sun (like, Red Dwarfs) are fully convective, meaning that the surface, envelope, shell, and core of star materials all mix. Because of this mixing, there is no helium buildup in the core. This means that there is not enough pressure to fuse the helium in fully convective stars, and so they skip the contraction and expansion phases of Red Giant Stars. Instead, with no gas pressure to counteract gravity, the star collapses in on itself and forms a White Dwarf (Cosmos).
~ High-Mass Stars ~
High-mass stars are classified as those more than 1.4 times the mass of the sun (NASA). High-Mass Stars, as opposed to their Low-Mass counterparts, use up their hydrogen fast, and as such have much shorter lives. Just like Low-Mass Stars, they'll eventually run out of hydrogen in both their core and their shell, and this will cause the star to contract. Their density and pressure will become so strong that the core becomes extremely hot, and helium fusion starts quickly (there is no helium flash because the process of fusion will begin slowly, rather than in "a flash"). The release of energy will cause it to expand and cool into a Red Supergiant, and will also begin the fusion of the helium shell.
Once all of the helium is gone, leaving carbon and oxygen nuclei, the star contracts yet again. The mass (and the gravity squeezing it into a very small space with a very large density) of a high-mass star will be enough to generate the temperatures needed for carbon fusion. This produces sodium, neon, and magnesium. The neon can also fuse with helium (whose nuclei is released in the neon fusion) to create magnesium. Once the core runs out of neon, oxygen fuses. This process keeps going, creating heavier and heavier elements, until it stops at iron. At this point, the supergiant star resembles an onion. It is layered: with the heavier elements being deeper within the star, and the lighter elements closer to the surface (ATNF).
But what happens after the star finally gets to iron? We'll get back to that in Chapters 8, 9, and 10 - where we'll discuss Supernovae, Neutron Stars, and Black Holes.
We’re nearing the end of our star’s life, and now it’s time to look into the many ways it can go out.
If our first five chapters were all about life, these next five will be all about death.
First - Chapter 1: An Introduction
Previous - Chapter 5: A Day in the Life
Next - Chapter 7: What Goes Around, Comes Around
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I'm watching the launch now, half an hour to go!
This is the first NASA astronaut launch since 2011. I wanted to go to Cape Canaveral to watch but instead I'm watching from afar :)
(Edit: they’ve put off the launch till Saturday due to weather)
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THE LIFE OF A STAR: WHAT GOES AROUND, COMES AROUND
Previously on The Life of a Star, Chapter 6 ...
"But what happens after the shell is fused? We'll get back to that in Chapter 7, where we'll discuss White Dwarfs and Planetary Nebulae."
After a low-mass star loses its hydrogen core, it becomes a mighty Red Giant - the star contracts and then heats up again, igniting hydrogen shell fusion and swelling the star to epic proportions. That is, until the hydrogen shell and the helium core and all fused up, in which the helium shell will begin to fuse. Remember the last chapter, when I said that these stars don't have enough pressure to fuse the results of the triple-alpha process? Well, I wasn't lying.
And unlike the end of hydrogen fusion - where low-mass stars have a "2nd life" and continue fusing the elements - this means the end for our star. Now, due to the build-up of carbon and oxygen in the core (and the lack of enough pressure to fuse these elements), the star has run out of fuel. This cancels out gas pressure, which breaks the hydrostatic equilibrium. Gravity wins the constant battle within the star, and the core collapses.
The leftover core - tiny and hot - is called a Wolf-Rayet type star and squeezed into a volume one-millionth the size of the original star (Harvard). Now, why does the star stop here? If gravity overpowers the pressure inside the star, why does it not completely collapse into a black hole? Well, that's due to a little thing called electron degeneracy pressure. Basically, the Pauli exclusion principle states that "no two electrons with the same spin can occupy the same energy state in the same volume." Due to the core collapse, electrons are forced together. The Pauli exclusion principle predicts that these electrons, once having filled a lower energy state, will move to a higher one and begin to speed up. This creates pressure and prevents the core from further collapse. However, at a certain mass, this becomes impossible to maintain. White dwarfs have something called the Chandrasekhar limit, which states that white dwarfs cannot exist if their original mass is over 1.44 times the mass of the Sun. This is due to mass-radius relationships, something we'll discuss in the next chapter.
One of my favorite things about stars is the fact that they're a cycle - the death of some stars causes the birth of others. White dwarfs do this, too, by creating something we talked about in Chapter 3: Planetary Nebulae.
The collapsed Wolf-Rayet type star is extremely small, with high density and temperature. Streams of photons/energy/heat - stellar winds - push out the cooler outer layers of the dead star (Astronomy Notes). The core emits UV radiation, which ionizes the hydrogen and causes it to emit light, forming fluorescent and spherical clouds of gas and dust surrounding the hot white dwarf. These are Planetary Nebulae, which can later be clumped by gravity and spun to create a new star. The cycle continues (Uoregon).
The leftover core, the White Dwarf, is characterized by a low luminosity (due to the lack of new photons, which the star will start to lose by radiation) and a mass under about 1.44 times that of the Sun.
Due to the intense gravity, the White Dwarf (despite being very large in mass) has a radius comparable to that of the Earth. If you consult the density equation (d=m/v, which basically means that if you enlarge or shrink either the mass or the volume that the density will increase), White Dwarfs have enormous densities. The core is a compact of carbon and oxygen. Because the star is unable to fuse these elements, they kind of just ... sit there. Surrounding this is a shell of helium and a small hydrogen envelope. Some even have a very thin layer of carbon (Britannica).
However, the White Dwarf isn't the end for the star. There's one more stage for the star to go through before completely "dying": becoming a Black Dwarf.
After the core is left behind, there Is no fuel left to burn. That means no new energy production. However, the leftover heat from the contraction remains, and the star will begin to cool down. Higher mass White Dwarfs, due to having a smaller radius, radiate this away slower than the low-mass ones. There are two types of cooling: radiative and neutrino. Radiative cooling is simple: as the star gives off light and energy outward, it loses heat. Neutrino cooling is a bit more complex: at extremely hot temperatures, gamma radiation passes electrons, and this reaction creates a pair of neutrinos. Because neutrinos interact very weakly with matter, they escape the White Dwarf quickly, taking energy with them. It's also possible to have a hunch of crystal in the center of a Black Dwarf: "On the other hand, as a white dwarf cools, the ions can arrange themselves in an organized lattice structure when their temperature falls below a certain point. This is called crystallization and will release energy that delays the cooling time up to 30%." (Uoregon).
The White Dwarf will become a Black Dwarf after it radiates away all of its heat and becomes a cold, dark shell of its former self. Because it's radiated away all of its heat, it emits no light, hence the name. However, according to theoretical physics, there isn't a single Black Dwarf in the universe. Why? Because it should take at least a hundred million, billion years for a White Dwarf to cool down into a Black Dwarf. Because the universe is predicted to be around 13.7 billion years old, there hasn't been enough time for a single White Dwarf to completely cool down (space.com).
However, there's one last thing that can happen to a White Dwarf. And that's where things in this book will start to get explosive.
White Dwarfs in binary star systems (where two stars orbit around a center of mass, we'll touch on it more in Additional Topics) can undergo a Classical Nova. These supernovae occur in systems with one White Dwarf and one main-sequence star. If they orbit close enough, the White Dwarf will begin to pull the hydrogen and helium from the other star in what is called an Accretion Disk, what is to say a disk of plasma and particles which spiral inwards due to gravity and feeds one body off of another. The accretion of this plasma onto the surface of the White Dwarf increases pressure and temperature so much that fusion reactions spark and the outburst of energy ejects the shell in a burst of light - a nova (Cosmos).
This process doesn't end, however. It can repeat itself again and again in what is called a Recurrent Nova. We know the existence of these based on pictures of the same star system with expanding shells, the aftermath of recurrent novae. Because White Dwarfs are the most common star death in the universe, and most stars are in binary or multiple star systems, novae are fairly common (Uoregon).
Our discussion of novae will be an excellent transition into our next topic: supernovae! This will be the beginning of the end for the High-mass stars we talked about in Chapter 6, and we’ll even talk a little bit more about White Dwarf collisions and how they are related to supernovae, neutron stars, and more!
From here on out, stars are going to become much more dramatic - and all the cooler (well, not really)!
First - Chapter 1: An Introduction
Previous - Chapter 6: The End (But Not Really)
Next - Chapter 8: Why We’re Literally Made of Star-stuff (unpublished)
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Can I go to Lake Thetis? Damn.
Florida’s got nothing on this place, I’m sorry.
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Milky Way + Stromatolites - Lake Thetis, Western Australia
Nikon d5500 - 35mm - 9 x 13s - ISO 3200 - f/2.2