1 / 54

Extragalactic Astronomy

Extragalactic Astronomy. Lecture 4: Kinematics & Mass Distribution of Spirals and Dwarfs. Dynamics of Disks. A disk is a system in equilibrium between: Gravity (inward) Rotation (outward) A disk is supported by rotation in r V rot ~ 200 km/sec

lumina
Download Presentation

Extragalactic Astronomy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extragalactic Astronomy Lecture 4: Kinematics & Mass Distribution of Spirals and Dwarfs

  2. Dynamics of Disks • A disk is a system in equilibrium between: • Gravity (inward) • Rotation (outward) • A disk is supported by rotation in r • Vrot ~ 200 km/sec • A disk is supported by the velocity dispersion in z • s ~ 10 km/sec • So, V (r) allow to deduce the gravitational potentiel f (r)

  3. Dynamics of Disks • From Poisson equation: • Until the 70s, the method of flattened spheroids was used. The mass distribution was modeled by a succession of flattened shells with r(a), where a was the major axis of the shell

  4. Dynamics of Disks • The flattening of the shell is given by (1 – k2)1/2, where k is the axis ratio • The advantage of this model is that V (r) depends only of r (a < r) beause the potential f inside the shell is constant

  5. Dynamics of Disks Parametrization: Brandt (1960) n = parameter of the form Determines where the curve starts to be Keplerian Mtot = (3/2)3/n V2max rmax / G

  6. Dynamics of Disks Infinitely thin disk: Freeman (1970)

  7. Dynamics of Disks Exponential disk

  8. Dynamics of Disks Solid body (e.g. dwarf) Flat (e.g. spiral)

  9. Dynamics of Disks Infinitely thin c/a ~ 0.2 Carignan 1983

  10. Optical Rotation Curves Rubin et al. 1980, ApJ, 238, 471

  11. Optical Rotation Curves bulge disk Kent 1986, AJ, 91, 1301

  12. Radio Rotation Curves Bosma 1981, AJ, 86, 1825

  13. Radio Rotation Curves M(r) ~ r sM ~ sHI Bosma 1981, AJ, 86, 1825

  14. HI Rotation Curve Rogstad 1974, AJ, 193, 309

  15. HI Rotation Curves Sicotte & Carignan 1997, AJ, 113, 1585

  16. HI Rotation Curves Sicotte & Carignan 1997, AJ, 113, 1585

  17. HI Rotation Curves Bosma 1981, AJ, 86, 1791

  18. HI Rotation Curves warp Bosma 1981, AJ, 86, 1791

  19. Mass Models Carignan & Freeman 1985, ApJ, 294, 494

  20. Mass Models Carignan & Freeman 1985, ApJ, 294, 494

  21. Mass Models Disk Halo NGC 3109 Carignan 1985, ApJ, 299, 59

  22. Mass Models NGC 3109 Jobin & Carignan 1980

  23. Mass Models • Halo formalism (Kent 1986)

  24. Mass Models

  25. Mass Models van Albada et al. 1985, ApJ, 295, 305

  26. Mass Models

  27. Vc observed Vc    R Vc calculated for a disk Fit of rotation curves Département de physique

  28. Mass Models Kent 1987, AJ, 93, 816

  29. Mass Models

  30. Mass Models

  31. Mass Models • MOND: Modified Newtonian Dynamics • Milgrom (1983) proposed that the law of gravity must be modified in presence of small accelerations • For large R, V2 = (GMa0)1/2 • where a0 = const. Begeman et al. 1991

  32. Mass Models Sanders et al. 1991

  33. Mass Models Blais-Ouellette et al. 2001

  34. Mass Models - Dwarfs Carignan & Beaulieu 1989 Carignan & Freeman 1988

  35. Mass Models - Dwarfs Carignan & Purton 1998

  36. Mass Models - Dwarfs

  37. Mass Models - Dwarfs Keplerian decline

  38. Mass Models - Dwarfs DDO 154

  39. Mass Models - Dwarfs Carignan et al. 1990

  40. Mass Models - Dwarfs

  41. Mass Models – Beam Smearing Blais-Ouellette et al. 1999

  42. Mass Models – Beam Smearing Example of Beam Smearing for DDO 88 with the VLA

  43. Mass Models – Beam Smearing Blais-Ouellette et al. 1999

  44. Mass Models

  45. Mass Models

  46. Mass Models

  47. Mass Models (cusp vs core) Blais-Ouellette et al. 2001

  48. Mass Models (cusp vs core)

  49. Mass Models (cusp vs core) LSB LSB & dwarfs de Blok & Bosma 2002 Swaters et al. 2003

  50. Mass Models (cusp vs core) De Naray et al. 2006

More Related