Our Expanding Universe
... Around the same time that Hubble was studying red shift, Georges Lemaître, a Belgian priest and astrophysicist, suggested that all matter and energy in the Universe expanded from a hot, dense mass with an incredibly small volume. This expansion is known as the Big Bang. Astronomers today estimate th ...
... Around the same time that Hubble was studying red shift, Georges Lemaître, a Belgian priest and astrophysicist, suggested that all matter and energy in the Universe expanded from a hot, dense mass with an incredibly small volume. This expansion is known as the Big Bang. Astronomers today estimate th ...
Question 1
... the source of energy is very small. energy is coming from matter and antimatter. the energy source is rotating rapidly. a chain reaction of supernovas occurs. there are many separate sources of energy in the core. ...
... the source of energy is very small. energy is coming from matter and antimatter. the energy source is rotating rapidly. a chain reaction of supernovas occurs. there are many separate sources of energy in the core. ...
Observational Astronomy - Lecture 10 Galaxies
... mass of galaxies is in the form of “Dark Matter”. This matter is not made up of ordinary matter (i.e. it is not made up of atoms). The ordinary matter (which astronomers typically call “baryonic” matter), has the following components: Stars and planets - these account for perhaps 10-50% of the ordin ...
... mass of galaxies is in the form of “Dark Matter”. This matter is not made up of ordinary matter (i.e. it is not made up of atoms). The ordinary matter (which astronomers typically call “baryonic” matter), has the following components: Stars and planets - these account for perhaps 10-50% of the ordin ...
Universe of Learning Science Briefing: Our Home, the Milky Way
... But there are types of stars called Red Clump Giants for which we know the intrinsic brightness. They are also fairly common and bright and can be used to trace the structure of the Galaxy. These can be used to measure distances; stars twice as far away are four times fainter. ...
... But there are types of stars called Red Clump Giants for which we know the intrinsic brightness. They are also fairly common and bright and can be used to trace the structure of the Galaxy. These can be used to measure distances; stars twice as far away are four times fainter. ...
Observing the Universe from the Classroom
... whereas the gas-rich spirals spend most of their lifetime in ...
... whereas the gas-rich spirals spend most of their lifetime in ...
The Galaxies
... ► Ellipticals range is size from the smallest known galaxies (1,000 LY across and about a million stars) to the largest known galaxies (nearly a million LY across with tens of trillions of stars). ...
... ► Ellipticals range is size from the smallest known galaxies (1,000 LY across and about a million stars) to the largest known galaxies (nearly a million LY across with tens of trillions of stars). ...
THE BIG BANG THEORY
... mass of the Universe consists of dark matter, a substance quite different from the ordinary matter that makes up atoms and the familiar world around us. • Dark matter only interacts with gravity, which means it neither reflects, emits or obstructs light (or indeed any other type of electromagnetic r ...
... mass of the Universe consists of dark matter, a substance quite different from the ordinary matter that makes up atoms and the familiar world around us. • Dark matter only interacts with gravity, which means it neither reflects, emits or obstructs light (or indeed any other type of electromagnetic r ...
Dark matter
Dark matter is a hypothetical kind of matter that cannot be seen with telescopes but would account for most of the matter in the universe. The existence and properties of dark matter are inferred from its gravitational effects on visible matter, on radiation, and on the large-scale structure of the universe. Dark matter has not been detected directly, making it one of the greatest mysteries in modern astrophysics.Dark matter neither emits nor absorbs light or any other electromagnetic radiation at any significant level. According to the Planck mission team, and based on the standard model of cosmology, the total mass–energy of the known universe contains 4.9% ordinary matter, 26.8% dark matter and 68.3% dark energy. Thus, dark matter is estimated to constitute 84.5% of the total matter in the universe, while dark energy plus dark matter constitute 95.1% of the total mass–energy content of the universe.Astrophysicists hypothesized the existence of dark matter to account for discrepancies between the mass of large astronomical objects determined from their gravitational effects, and their mass as calculated from the observable matter (stars, gas, and dust) that they can be seen to contain. Their gravitational effects suggest that their masses are much greater than the observable matter survey suggests. Dark matter was postulated by Jan Oort in 1932, albeit based upon insufficient evidence, to account for the orbital velocities of stars in the Milky Way. In 1933, Fritz Zwicky was the first to use the virial theorem to infer the existence of unseen matter, which he referred to as dunkle Materie 'dark matter'. More robust evidence from galaxy rotation curves was discovered by Horace W. Babcock in 1939, but was not attributed to dark matter. The first hypothesis to postulate ""dark matter"" based upon robust evidence was formulated by Vera Rubin and Kent Ford in the 1960s–1970s, using galaxy rotation curves. Subsequently, many other observations have indicated the presence of dark matter in the universe, including gravitational lensing of background objects by galaxy clusters such as the Bullet Cluster, the temperature distribution of hot gas in galaxies and clusters of galaxies and, more recently, the pattern of anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background. According to consensus among cosmologists, dark matter is composed primarily of a not yet characterized type of subatomic particle.The search for this particle, by a variety of means, is one of the major efforts in particle physics today.Although the existence of dark matter is generally accepted by the mainstream scientific community, some alternative theories of gravity have been proposed, such as MOND and TeVeS, which try to account for the anomalous observations without requiring additional matter. However, these theories cannot account for the properties of galaxy clusters.