Milky Way
The Milky Way is a delicious[citation NOT needed] chocolate candy bar the galaxy in which we live. The term "galaxy" itself comes from the Greek word for milk, so "Galaxy" is just a fancy way of saying "Milky Way", which makes sense given that until into the 20th century most people thought the Milky Way and its largest companion galaxies, the Clouds of Magellan
It's not rocket science, it's... Astronomy |
The Final Frontier |
The abyss stares back |
v - t - e |
“”A million stars above me Only one life to count them all |
—Milky Way by Loudness |
“”We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars. |
—Oscar Wilde |
Observing it
The Milky Way can be seen from those — sadly less and less common — fortunate places with little or no light pollution
Some astronomical history
The origin of the name "Milky Way" comes from its "milky" appearance in the sky, and for example Greek mythology narrates how it's the milk of the goddess Hera after Heracles sucked so hard from one of her nipples that it was scattered over the sky (and Hera presumably quite pissed off). Later Aristotle would propose the Milky Way are just stellar exhalations being ignited in the upper atmosphere[1], and Democritus
Since we're inside it, determining its shape and where our Solar System is located was not, and still isn't, an easy task (see next section), with the earliest attempts putting the Sun at its center[3] After spotting many curious spiral-shaped objects in the sky, that with powerful telescopes turned out to be clusters of stars too far away to be easily resolved — galaxies — rather than nebulae within the Milky Way[4], it was clear our galaxy was just one more of the bunch. Nowadays we have refined the location of the Solar System within the Milky Way considerably, for example the specific arm of the Milky War we are located in is called the Orion Arm
Structure and properties
There's an analogy by Isaac Asimov in one of his popular science books where he compares to decipher the structure of our galaxy, with us inside it, with attempting to map a city while living in a low house on its outskirts and having foggy weather. The actual situation is far worse, since we cannot leave that house,[note 3] have no stuff as drones[note 4] to map it (and, of course, no Internet to check), and we're not entirely sure how far away are those other houses in suburbs distinct to ours. The result of this is that, in order to map the structure of our galaxy, we must use many different tracers (young stars, variable stars, gas…), cope with the interstellar dust, that in visible light absorbs and reddens starlight to the point of hiding the stars behind it, and take assumptions on the distance to those objects too far away to measure their parallaxes, even if those assumptions are correct on more than one occasion as per the Cepheid Variable.
The basic picture that has emerged is that the Milky Way is just one of two hundred billion galaxies in the observable Universe, and a large barred spiral galaxy[note 5] of moderately loosely wound arms[note 6], with a diameter of around 100,000 light-years[7] (and perhaps at least a half times more)[8] and several hundred billion stars[9][10] (to settle in the middle, say 250 billion of them; its exact number is very poorly constrained, as it depends of the unknown proportion of low-mass stars
Because we're inside it and lack the privileged view that we've of other galactic systems from the outside, parameters such as its mass -be it in visible or dark matter- and total luminosity are poorly known and the literature offers often quite different values[13][14]. However estimations tend to converge in the Milky Way having around 50 billion solar masses in stars[15] plus between 5 and 7.5 billion solar masses of gas -almost all as hydrogen-[16] and 50-75 million solar masses of interstellar dust[16]. When invisible dark matter is included, this climbs to a mass of up to around 1 trillion solar masses[17]. Its total luminosity in visible light varies also wildly depending of the estimation used, but tends to hover over 20-30 billion times the Sun's luminosity -corresponding to absolute magnitudes of -20.9[14] and -21.3[13] respectively[18]-.
The Milky Way is divided in the parts that follow:
Galactic bulge
Our Solar System is located at around 27,000 light years from the center of the Milky Way, located in the direction of the constellation of Sagittarius, and takes 240 million years to complete a turn around it. This center is hidden by extensive dust and cold gas clouds, that disallows us to study it in visible light and forces to use other wavelengths as the infrared or the radio waves able to penetrate said clouds.
The center of the Milky Way is occupied by a dense and spheroidal agrupation of old, metal-rich[note 7] stars called the bulge, that has a radius of 10.000 years, around 15 per cent of the mass in stars of the galaxy[15] and where few things of interest happen[19]. This changes dramatically at its very center, where in addition to those old stars one finds not only much younger ones, including short-lived massive stars, but also a number of star-forming regions and young, massive clusters of stars like the Arches
The bulge is threaded with a bar (actually two, one within the other)[21] primarily composed of old stars, with a not well determined radius (up to 16.000 light-years)[22], and the ensemble may be surrounded by a gas-rich ring often identified with the innermost arms of the Milky Way that contains most of its star formation activity, and that is thought would be the most visible feature of our galaxy from external ones[23].
Galactic disk
This is where our Solar System is located. As has been described above, this feature has a size of 100,000 light-years (and probably even quite more). However, it's pretty thin — most of its stars are within 1,000 light-years above or below its equatorial plane. Unlike the bulge — except its very center —, the disk contains a mixture of stellar populations, from old to intermediate-aged ones as the Sun, and finally young ones, and is rich in both gas and dust. Its bluish color contrasts with the yellowish tint of the bulge showing how star formation is still going on there.
The most prominent feature of the disk are the spiral arms, that emerge from the central bar or the mentioned central ring. Despite that, the issues that we've to study the Milky Way's structure hit pretty hard there and while we know our galaxy has four spiral arms[24] (two if we just use old stars as tracers)[25], we don't know its exact layout — it does not help either that the arms are far from regular and, as per other spiral galaxies, have spurs, branches, and twists and there's no consensus on this. They are[note 8]:
- 3-Kpc Arm — Perseus Arm (actually two tightly wound arms, the Near 3 kpc Arm and Far 3 kpc Arm, that probably are associated with the ring mentioned above that encircles the central bar. 3-Kpc refers to its distance from the Galactic center (10,000 light-years). Perseus is also one of the two most conspicuous arms of the galaxy.)
- Norma — Outer Arm (Outer refers to it being the outermost (known) arm. The longest one.)
- Scutum — Centaurus Arm (With Perseus the Milky Way's most important spiral arm.)
- Sagittarius — Carina Arm (Once considered a major arm, but now just a minor one.)
- In addition to these arms there are also spurs branching of them (at least two). From our perspective, the most conspicuous is the Orion — Cygnus spur/arm, as our Solar System is within it.
The spiral arms are the places where the disc's star formation is concentrated, and in pictures of external galaxies[note 9] are quite photogenic because of its even bluer tinge contrasting with the pink and red of emission nebulae
Galactic halo
Surrounding the disk in all directions there's a far more diffuse halo occupied by old, metal-poor stars, many of them in more than 150 massive and dense star clusters named globular clusters
Environment
The Milky Way is accompanied by a large number of satellite galaxies, most of them being small, very low surface brightness
In addition to these small systems one can find a pair of more conspicuous (but still small compared with the Milky Way) galaxies, the already mentioned Clouds of Magellan
Much further away one can find a big galaxy, the famous Andromeda Galaxy that is twice as large and much more massive and luminous than the Milky Way. Together with several dozens of other generally (much) smaller galaxies, they form the Local Group
Formation and evolution
The origin of the Milky Way is believed to be in the many matter overdensities originated in the cosmic inflation, just after the Big Bang[29]. Some of them formed what would become today's globular clusters, while others formed small protogalaxies, that would collide among themselves to form a larger, spheroidal-shaped system where star formation took place at a fast pace, exhausting the gas and expelling the remaining one in the form of supernovae and stellar winds. As this primeval Milky Way had a very fast rotation the gas formed a disk around the spheroid component, where star formation would take place at a considerably lower rate continuing until now[29].
The Milky Way has continued growing until now by merging with smaller galaxies as well as accreting the surrounding gas to form new stars. Unlike many other spirals as the neighboring Andromeda Galaxy, this process has been relatively calm with no mergers with galaxies of similar size to ours[30] and has caused it to be atypical compared to other spirals as both its central supermassive black hole and halo are of relatively low mass and it has a large satellite galaxy (the Large Magellanic Cloud)[31].
The fate of the Milky Way is to continue its assemblage by absorbing smaller galaxies (see the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal above), up to the Large Magellanic Cloud around two billion years from now[32], which will also transform it into a more typical spiral galaxy engorging a lot both its central black hole and halo[31], as well as accreting gas from said corona of hot gas. However, as raw hydrogen is being consumed to form new stars, star formation is slowing down and models suggest it will stop in five billion years from now coinciding with the expected collision
External links
- See the Wikipedia article on Milky Way., as well as references therein.
- The Galaxy Song — Stephen Hawking sings it with Eric Idle of Monty Python
References
- The Works of Aristotle
- Galileo Galilei, Sidereus Nuncius (Venice, (Italy): Thomas Baglioni, 1610), pages 15 and 16.
- William Herschel (1785) "On the Construction of the Heavens," Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 75 : 213–266 archive.org
- For example, "The Earl of Rosse and the Leviathan of Parsontown"
- R. Drimmel; D.N. Spergel (2001). "Three Dimensional Structure of the Milky Way Disk". The Astrophysical Journal 556 (1): 181–202. arXiv:astro-ph/0101259. Bibcode 2001ApJ...556..181D. doi
File:Wikipedia's W.svg :10.1086/321556. - Leslie Mullen (18 May 2001). "Galactic Habitable Zones". Astrobiology Magazine. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
- How big is the Milky Way?
- The Corrugated Galaxy—Milky Way May Be Much Larger Than Previously Estimated
- How many stars in the Milky Way
- Milky Way
- 100 Billion Alien Planets Fill Our Milky Way Galaxy: Study
- One or more bound planets per Milky Way star from microlensing observations
- A Catalog of Neighboring Galaxies
- Absolute magnitude
- Improved Constraints on the Total Stellar Mass, Color, and Luminosity of the Milky Way
- The Interstellar Medium
- The mass distribution and gravitational potential of the Milky Way
- For the latter see also here
- The Stars of the Milky Way
- Monitoring Stellar Orbits Around the Massive Black Hole in the Galactic Center
- The long Galactic bar as seen by UKIDSS Galactic plane survey
- Bar at Milky Way's heart revealed
- Introduction: Galactic Ring Survey
- Milky Way Galaxy Has Four Arms, Reaffirming Old Data and Contradicting Recent Research
- Evidence for a two-armed spiral in the Milky Way
- Catalog of Parameters for Milky Way Globular Clusters: The Database
- A Huge Reservoir of Ionized Gas around the Milky Way: Accounting for the Missing Mass?
- "Researchers have found evidence of Milky Way cannibalizing its dwarf satellite galaxies"
- Milky Way's origins are not what they seem
- The Formation and Early Evolution of the Milky Way Galaxy
- The aftermath of the Great Collision between our Galaxy and the Large Magellanic Cloud
- Catastrophic galactic collision could send Solar System flying into space
- The Mid-life Crisis of the Milky Way and M31
- First Gaia Dynamics of the Andromeda System: DR2 Proper Motions, Orbits, and Rotation of M31 and M33
Notes
- North Korea says hello. Thank the Glorious Leader!
- If you're curious, its integrated color would be roughly equivalent to a "Cool White" lamp (read: white but with a bit of warm tint)
- Well, we can leave it, but I hope you have enough patience for the many thousand years that we'd need to go just to the closest house with our current technology.
- We have them, but see previous note
- That is, one where the spiral arms emerge from a bar (or a ring that surrounds that bar, as happens with ours) located on its center
- SBbc in the Hubble classification
File:Wikipedia's W.svg ("B" stands for "barred") - For astronomers, everything that is not hydrogen nor helium
- Check the other wiki
File:Wikipedia's W.svg - Simply search in Google images "spiral galaxy" and scroll down
- An astronomy textbook describes them as "consist(ing) largely of dark matter, with luminous stars as merely the icing on the cake".