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Cosmic Survey History of the Universe

Cosmic Survey History of the Universe. Linda L. Smith Elementary Science Resource Specialist Paulsboro Public Schools NASA Educator Ambassador Lsmith@paulsboro.k12.nj.us. How Do We Know. Scientists study how light and other energies interacts with different things.

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Cosmic Survey History of the Universe

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  1. Cosmic SurveyHistory of the Universe Linda L. Smith Elementary Science Resource Specialist Paulsboro Public Schools NASA Educator Ambassador Lsmith@paulsboro.k12.nj.us

  2. How Do We Know • Scientists study how light and other energies interacts with different things. • From those observations they know that light, and any other kind of energy travels in waves.

  3. How Do We Know • Scientists studied those waves and noticed that they had rules. • They noticed that in any one type of energy, the space between the top of one loop to the top of the next loop was always the same. • They called that space wavelength

  4. How Do We Know • Scientist also noticed that every different kind of energy had a different wavelength • Because of this, scientist now had a way to tell different kinds of energy apart.

  5. How Do We Know • Because each wavelength was exactly the same as the next, scientist discovered that each kind of energy moved a different amount of waves through a specific space in a specific time. • Because of this, scientist now discovered you could tell what kind of energy you had by counting the amount of waves that went by in a set amount of time. They called this measurement frequency.

  6. What does the EMS tell us?(Electromagnetic Spectrum) • Transports energy • Electric and magnetic fields oscillate: that’s the “wave” • Moves at speed of light, 3 x 108 m/s • Wavelength, frequency, energy all related • Type of radiation (usually) depends on energy/temperature of object

  7. How Do We Know? When we organize light waves in this type of order, we call it the “Electromagnetic Spectrum” or EMS

  8. How Do We Know • Radio waves are energy that has long wavelengths and small frequencies. • They are the kind of energy we attach radio signals to broadcast them. • Stars and gasses in space also emit radio waves

  9. How Do We Know • Microwaves have a shorter wavelength, about the size of a honeybee. • Cell phones and microwave ovens produce microwaves • Gasses that are collapsing into stars in space also produce microwaves

  10. How Do We Know • Infrared energy has an even shorter wavelength, about the size of the head of a pin. • They are easily absorbed into molecules, heating them up, like our french fries at MacDonald's • The dust between the stars also gives off infrared energy

  11. How Do We Know • Visible light rays are even shorter, about the size of a protozoan. • Visible light is the kind of energy that bounces off of me, into your eyes, and allows you to see me. • Anything you can see with your eyes is in the visible light range

  12. How Do We Know • Ultraviolet wavelengths are even smaller, about the size of a molecule. That makes their frequencies very high. • A lot of waves can fit in a space, so they have a lot of energy • The sun and other stars produce ultraviolet energy • Our skin is a detector of ultraviolet energy

  13. How Do We Know • X-rays are even smaller than Ultraviolet waves, about the size of an atom, • so they have even more energy than ultraviolet rays • Doctors use x-rays to look at your bones. • Hot gases in space also emit x-rays

  14. How Do We Know • Gamma rays are even smaller than x-rays, about the size of a nucleus of an atom. They have even more energy. • Radioactive materials, and particle accelerators make gamma rays • The biggest producer of gamma rays is our universe

  15. How Do We Know • We started to make telescopes that would detect different kinds of frequencies • Some telescopes can detect visual light energy • Some can detect X-ray energy • Some can detect radio energy • Putting all this information together helps us to understand what’s going on in our universe

  16. Only visible, radio and some IR and UV gets through the air! To see gamma rays, X-rays, most UV and some IR you must go to space http://imagers.gsfc.nasa.gov/ems/atmosphere.gif

  17. How Do We Know? Hubble Space Telescope • Is probably the most famous of Telescopes • Three cameras, two spectrographs, and fine guidance sensors • Produces high resolution images of astronomical objects • Its images are 10 times better than the best telescope on earth. • Takes pictures of small areas in great detail

  18. How Do We Know? GALEX Space Telescope • Relatively small satellite. It is just about six feet tall and as wide as your outstretched arms. • The two mirrors of the GALEX telescope are just a half meter (20 inches) across • Acts like a digital camera that takes pictures in the ultraviolet range of light waves • Takes broad far away shots of the sky

  19. How Do We Know? GALEX Space Telescope • Orbits the earth once every 98 minutes • Takes pictures that are 2 moons wide • Has special mirrors that curve the light. • Ordinary telescopes would get images that looked like comets from such a large scan of the sky. GALEX’s mirrors change that kind of image into a flat picture • In addition to visible light GALEX has detectors that can read ultra violet light

  20. How Do We Know? GALEX Space Telescope • Hubble Telescope takes very detailed pictures of a very small section of the sky • GALEX takes very large pictures of very large pieces of the sky • It’s kind of like Hubble taking close up pictures and GALEX taking landscape picture

  21. How Do We Know? GALEX & Hubble Space Telescopes Working Together • Scientists take pictures from Hubble and Galax and compare and contrast the data from both telescopes • The analysis of these images and images from many more telescopes are the basis of what we know about the Universe today.

  22. What We Know Size and Scale of the Universe Image courtesy of The Cosmic Perspective by Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, & Voit; Addison Wesley, 2002

  23. M45 – The Pleiades Cluster X-ray: T. Preibisch Ultraviolet: MSX Visible: AAO Infrared: IRAS Radio: NVSS

  24. X-ray: Chandra Multi-wavelength Crab Nebula Ultraviolet: UIT Visible: Palomar Infrared: 2MASS Radio: VLA

  25. M51 – The Whirlpool Galaxy X-ray: Chandra Ultraviolet: GALEX Visible: T. & D. Hallas Infrared: ISO Radio: VLA

  26. Sample Universal Objects

  27. How Big? Telescope 40 feet long, 12 meters Moon 2,000 miles across, 3,200 kilometers Saturn 75,000 miles across, 121,000 kilometers Sun 875,000 miles across, 1,408,000 kilometers Pleiades 60 trillion miles across, 1 x 1014 Kilometers Whirlpool Galaxy 600 thousand trillion miles across, 1 x 1018 Kilometers Hubble Galaxies 600 thousand million trillion miles across, 1 x 1021 Kilometers

  28. Telescope 350 miles above Earth’s surface, 560 kilometers Moon 250,000 miles, 402,000 kilometers Sun 93,000,000 miles, 1.5 x 108 kilometers Saturn 120,000,000 miles, 1.3 x 109 kilometers (at its closest) Pleiades 2,400 trillion miles, 4 x 1016 kilometers Whirlpool Galaxy 200 million, trillion miles, 3 x 1020 kilometers Hubble Galaxies 30 billion trillion miles, 5 x 1020 kilometers How Far?

  29. How Old? Telescope A few years (launched in 1990) Pleiades 80 million years Moon 4.5 Billion years Saturn 4.5 Billion years Sun 4.5 Billion years Whirlpool Galaxy 13 billion years Hubble Galaxies 13 billion years

  30. www.crystalballscience.com

  31. Earth • Planet where we all live • Comprised primarily of rock • Spherical in shape • 12,700 km in diameter • It would take 17 days to circumnavigate the globe driving a car at 100 km/hr • At the speed of light, it would take 0.13 seconds to go all the way around Earth.

  32. Sun • Star that Earth orbits • Composed primarily of hydrogen and helium gas • Uses nuclear fusion in its core to generate heat and light to allow itself to resist the crushing weight of its own mass • Spherical in shape • 1.39 Million km in diameter

  33. Earth & Sun • The Sun’s diameter is 109 times greater than that of Earth • Over 1 million Earths would fit inside the Sun’s volume • Earth orbits the Sun at an average distance of 150 million kilometers. This distance is called an Astronomical Unit (AU) • It would take 11,780 Earths lined up side to side to bridge the 1 AU between Earth and Sun.

  34. The Solar System • 8.5 planets, thousands and thousands of planetoids and asteroids, billions of comets and meteoroids • Mostly distributed in a disk about the Sun • Sun blows a constant wind of charged gas into interplanetary space, called the Solar Wind Boundary between Solar Wind and interstellar space at 100 AU from the Sun (200 AU diameter)

  35. The Solar Neighborhood • The region of the Galaxy within about 32.6 light-years of the Sun (65 light-years diameter) is considered its neighborhood. • Here stars move generally with the Sun in its orbit around the center of the Galaxy • This region is inside a large bubble of hot interstellar gas called the Local Bubble. Here the gas temperature is about 1 million degrees Kelvin and the density is 1000 times less than average interstellar space. To Center of Galaxy The image is 390 light-years across. Direction of Galactic Rotation

  36. You Are Here The Milky Way Galaxy The Milky Way Galaxy is a giant disk of stars 160,000 light-years across and 1,000 light-years thick. The Sun is located at the edge of a spiral arm, 30,000 light-years from the center It takes 250 Million years for the Sun to complete one orbit There are over 100 Billion stars in the Milky Way The Spiral arms are only 5% more dense than average, and are the locations of new star formation

  37. The Local Group • Contains 3 large spiral galaxies--Milky Way, Andromeda (M31), and Triangulum (M33)—plus a few dozen dwarf galaxies with elliptical or irregular shapes. • Gravitationally bound together—orbiting about a common center of mass • Ellipsoidal in shape • About 6.5 million light-years in diameter

  38. A cluster of many groups and clusters of galaxies • Largest cluster is the Virgo cluster containing over a thousand galaxies. • Clusters and groups of galaxies are gravitationally bound together, however the clusters and groups spread away from each other as the Universe expands. • The Local Supercluster gets bigger with time • It has a flattened shape • The Local Group is on the edge of the majority of galaxies • The Local Supercluster is about 130 Million light-years across The Local Supercluster

  39. 1.3 Billion light-years The Universe • Surveys of galaxies reveal a web-like or honeycomb structure to the Universe • Great walls and filaments of matter surrounding voids containing no galaxies • Probably 100 Billion galaxies in the Universe The plane of the Milky Way Galaxy obscures our view of what lies beyond. This creates the wedge-shaped gaps in all-sky galaxy surveys such as those shown here.

  40. The Universe The observable Universe is 27 Billion light-years in diameter. Computer Simulation

  41. Zoom out and make the Entire Visible Universe (27 billion light years across) the size of this room.How large would the Local Group be? The size of candy

  42. If the Sun were the size of this room, how big would earth be? The size of a grapefruit

  43. If the Solar System were the size of this room, how big would the Sun be? A grain of salt

  44. If the Solar System were the size of this room, how big would The orbit of Earth around the Sun be? The outside edge of a CD

  45. If the Solar System were the size of this room, how big would Earth be? The size of microscopic bacteria (~ 4 microns)

  46. Zoom out and make the Sun’s Neighborhood (2 Astronomical Units) (300 million kilometers)the size of this room.How large would the Solar System be? A grain of salt.

  47. Zoom out and make the Sun’s Neighborhood (65 light years across) the size of this room.How large would the Solar System be? A grain of salt.

  48. Zoom out and make the Milky Way Galaxy (160,000 light years across) the size of this room.How large would the Solar System be? A peppercorn

  49. Zoom out and make the Local Group of Galaxies (6.5 million light years across) the size of this room.How large would the Milky Way Galaxy be? A large Pizza

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