Astronomy
1st Edition
ISBN: 9781938168284
Author: Andrew Fraknoi; David Morrison; Sidney C. Wolff
Publisher: OpenStax
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Textbook Question
Chapter 28, Problem 10E
Suppose a galaxy formed stars for a few million years and then stopped (and no other galaxy merged or collided with it). What would be the most massive stars on the main sequence after 500 million years? After 10 billion years? How would the color of the galaxy change over this time span? (Refer to Evolution from the Main Sequence to Red Giants.)
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Chapter 28 Solutions
Astronomy
Ch. 28 - How are distant (young) galaxies different from...Ch. 28 - What is the evidence that star formation began...Ch. 28 - Describe the evolution of an elliptical galaxy....Ch. 28 - Explain what we mean when we call the universe...Ch. 28 - Describe the organization of galaxies into...Ch. 28 - What is the evidence that a large fraction of the...Ch. 28 - When astronomers make maps of the structure of the...Ch. 28 - How does the presence of an active galactic...Ch. 28 - Describe how you might use the color of a galaxy...Ch. 28 - Suppose a galaxy formed stars for a few million...
Ch. 28 - Given the ideas presented here about how galaxies...Ch. 28 - Can an elliptical galaxy evolve into a spiral?...Ch. 28 - If we see a double image of a quasar produced by a...Ch. 28 - The left panel of Figure 27.1 shows a cluster of...Ch. 28 - Suppose you are standing in the center of a large,...Ch. 28 - Astronomers have been making maps by observing a...Ch. 28 - Human civilization is about 10,000 years old as...Ch. 28 - Given that only about 5% of the galaxies visible...Ch. 28 - Using the information from Example 28.1, how much...Ch. 28 - Using the information from Example 28.1, if...Ch. 28 - Using the information from Example 28.1, how much...Ch. 28 - Galaxies are found in the “walls” of huge voids;...Ch. 28 - Calculate the velocity, the distance, and the...Ch. 28 - Assume that dark matter is uniformly distributed...Ch. 28 - The simulated box of galaxy filaments and...Ch. 28 - The first objects to collapse gravitationally...
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- Suppose that stars evolved without losing mass-that once matter was incorporated into a star, it remained there forever. How would the appearance of the Galaxy be different from what it is now? Would there be population I and population II stars? What other differences would there be?arrow_forwardAccording to Hubble’s law, what is the recessional velocity of a galaxy that is 108 light-years away from us? (Assume a Hubble constant of 22 km/s per million light-years.)arrow_forwardSuppose the stars in an elliptical galaxy all formed within a few million years shortly after the universe began. Suppose these stars have a range of masses, just as the stars in our own galaxy do. How would the color of the elliptical change over the next several billion years? How would its luminosity change? Why?arrow_forward
- Suppose the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy merges completely with the Milky Way and adds 150,000 stars to it. Estimate the percentage change in the mass of the Milky Way. Will this be enough mass to affect the orbit of the Sun around the galactic center? Assume that all of the Sagittarius galaxy’s stars end up in the nuclear bulge of the Milky Way Galaxy and explain your answer.arrow_forwardHow would the density inside a cold cloud (T=10K) compare with the density of the ultra-hot interstellar gas (T=106K) if they were in pressure equilibrium? (It takes a large cloud to be able to shield its interior from heating so that it can be at such a low temperature.) (Hint: In pressure equilibrium, the two regions must have nT equal, where n is the number of particles per unit volume and T is the temperature.) Which region do you think is more suitable for the creation of new stars? Why?arrow_forwardWe have said that the Galaxy rotates differentially; that is, stars in the inner parts complete a full 360° orbit around the center of the Galaxy more rapidly than stars farther out. Use Kepler’s third law and the mass we derived in Exercise 25.19 to calculate the period of a star that is only 5000 light-years from the center. Now do the same calculation for a globular cluster at a distance of 50,000 light-years. Suppose the Sun, this star, and the globular cluster all fall on a straight line through the center of the Galaxy. Where will they be relative to each other after the Sun completes one full journey around the center of the Galaxy? (Assume that all the mass in the Galaxy is concentrated at its center.)arrow_forward
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