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7.2 Galaxies

7.2 Galaxies. Properties of Galaxies. Contain stars, planets, and dust. Galaxy that has more dust Tend to produce more stars because stars form from dust and gases present in nebulae. Properties – Black Hole. Each galaxy contains at least one supermassive black hole at its centre.

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7.2 Galaxies

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  1. 7.2 Galaxies

  2. Properties of Galaxies • Contain stars, planets, and dust. • Galaxy that has more dust • Tend to produce more stars because stars form from dust and gases present in nebulae.

  3. Properties – Black Hole • Each galaxy contains at least one supermassive black hole at its centre. • A black hole is a region of space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. • Its gravity is so strong that it can pull a star right into it. • The star is completely destroyed. • The mass of the star adds to the black hole’s original mass, increasing the size of the black hole. • The Milky Way’s black hole has been pulling stars in for at least 7 billion years. • The current size of the black hole has a mass equal to about 3 million stars that are of similar size to our Sun.

  4. Properties of Galaxies – Black Hole

  5. Properties of Galaxie – Black Hole

  6. Properties of Galaxies – Dark Matter • The visible celestial objects might only take less than 10% of the total matter in the space.

  7. Properties of Galaxie – Dark Matter • Dark matter – matter in the universe that is invisible because it does not interact with light or any other kind of radiation. It is invisible to direct observation by telescopes. • How did astronomer detect its presence? • Unexpected motion of galaxies • Strong gravitational forces affecting them • The amount of visible mass is not enough. • Example – the stars in the Milky Way revolve around the galaxy’s centre at high speed without being flung off - the dark matter contributes large amount of gravitational force to hold all stars.

  8. Properties of Galaxies – Star Clusters • Star clusters – distinct groupings of stars, many stars gather in a relatively small region of space. • Star clusters occurs in two broad types: • Open clusters • Contains a few hundred – a few thousands stars. • Youngest star groups . • Globular clusters • Contains hundreds of thousands of stars. • Drawn together in a spherical form by the star’s gravity. • Oldest star groups.

  9. Properties of Galaxies – Star Clusters Open Cluster Globular Cluster

  10. Galaxy Shapes • 4 main shapes • Spiral • Barred spiral • Elliptical • Irregular • Measuring Properties • Sizes • Distances • Masses • Luminosities • Dark Matter

  11. Galaxy Shapes Elliptical Irregular Spiral

  12. Galaxies- Spiral and Barred Spiral • Spiral galaxies are names for the spiral-shaped arms that radiate out from the galaxy’s centre. • The spiral galaxies that appear to have a bar across them are called barred spiral galaxies.

  13. Galaxie – Spiral and Barred Sprial • A wave moving outwards from the central regions of the galaxy cause the gas and dust to compress into arm-like bands that rotate around the central hub. • New arms continually form as older ones disappear or change shape. • Gravity keeps the spirals from flying apart. • A typical spiral galaxy completes a full rotation once about every 300 million years. • From the side, a spiral galaxy looks like a thin disk. Most spiral galaxies have hundreds to thousands of star clusters.

  14. Galaxies-Spiral and Barred Spiral • Near the core is a widening called the central bulge. • Consisting mainly of old stars • Lack of dusk and gases – new stars rarely form in the bulge • The rest – galatic halo which is made up of individual stars.

  15. Spiral Galaxy

  16. Galaxies – Elliptical Galaxies • Shape ranges from almost spherical to football-shaped or long and cylindrical (like a pencil) • It is formed when two other galaxies merge. • The largest galaxies in the universe. • Contain very little dust – has fewer young stars.

  17. Galaxies – Irregular Galaxies • Irregular shapes • Caused by colliding with another galaxy or got close enough that the gravitational force from the other galaxy drew stars away.

  18. Galaxy Cluster • Milky Way is part of a group of about 20 galaxies. • A group of galaxies – galaxy cluster • The Milky Way is in Local Group, which is one group in Local Cluster, which is one cluster in one Local Supercluster..

  19. Galaxy Clusters

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