UNDERSTANDING THE UNIVERSE(LL)-W/CODE
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780393869903
Author: PALEN
Publisher: NORTON
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Chapter 15, Problem 10QAP
To determine
The rotation curves of spiral galaxies imply the distribution of mass resembles which of the following factor.
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3 A galaxy has a visible mass of 10 Mo and a flat rotation curve extending to 25 kpc at the level of 150 km s. What is the ratio of its dark-matter mass to its visible mass?
39.
The star forming region of a Spiral Galaxy will emit synchrotron radiation as a sun forms in the spiral arms.
True
False
A star at a distance of 50000 light years from the center of a galaxy has an orbital speed of 100 km/s around the galactic center. What is the total mass of the galaxy located at distances smaller than 50000 light years from the center?
A. 7.6 ×1010 solar masses
B. 4.2 ×1011 solar masses
C. 3.5 ×1010 solar masses
D. 1.4 ×1011 solar masses
Is the answer C?
M = (r x v^2) / G
= 50000 x 9.46e15 x (100000^2) / 6.67e-11 / 2e30 (the Sun's mass)
= 3.55e10 solar masses
Chapter 15 Solutions
UNDERSTANDING THE UNIVERSE(LL)-W/CODE
Ch. 15.1 - Prob. 15.1CYUCh. 15.2 - Prob. 15.2CYUCh. 15.3 - Prob. 15.3CYUCh. 15.4 - Prob. 15.4CYUCh. 15 - Prob. 1QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 2QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 3QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 4QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 5QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 6QAP
Ch. 15 - Prob. 7QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 8QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 9QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 10QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 11QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 12QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 13QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 14QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 15QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 16QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 17QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 18QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 19QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 20QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 21QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 22QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 23QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 24QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 25QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 26QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 27QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 28QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 29QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 30QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 31QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 32QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 33QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 34QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 35QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 36QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 37QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 38QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 39QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 40QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 41QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 42QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 43QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 44QAPCh. 15 - Prob. 45QAP
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Assume that the Sun orbits the center of the Galaxy at a speed of 220 km/s and a distance of 26,000 lightyears from the center. A. Calculate the circumference of the Sun’s orbit, assuming it to be approximately circular. (Remember that the circumference of a circle is given by 2pR, where R is the radius of the circle. Be sure to use consistent units. The conversion from light-years to km/s can be found in an online calculator or appendix, or you can calculate it for yourself: the speed of light is 300,000 km/s, and you can determine the number of seconds in a year.) B. Calculate the Sun’s period, the “galactic year.” Again, be careful with the units. Does it agree with the number we gave above?arrow_forwardOne way to calculate the size and shape of the Galaxy is to estimate the distances to faint stars just from their observed apparent brightnesses and to note the distance at which stars are no longer observable. The first astronomers to try this experiment did not know that starlight is dimmed by interstellar dust. Their estimates of the size of the Galaxy were much too small. Explain why.arrow_forward2. A galaxy cluster has a galaxy behind it whose image we see as being smeared out and curved, with an angular radius of curvature on the sky of θE. The background galaxy is at redshift zgal and the cluster is at zclust. What is the mass of the cluster in solar masses? Give your response in scientific notation with one decimal place. (The Hubble constant is of course 70 km/s/Mpc, and you can assume the Hubble law for these low redshifts). Values: zgal = 0.11 zclust = 0.07 θE = 117.4 arcsecondsarrow_forward
- Each point on the above diagram shows the line-of-sight recession velocity versus distance for a number of distant galaxies. Describe how the recession velocities of galaxies are measured by astronomers. Explain the different techniques used by astronomers to measure the distances to galaxies, and describe how these methods are used to construct the distance ladder.arrow_forwardWhat are the angular diameters of the following, as seen from Earth? a. The Sun, with radius R = Rsun = 7x10^5 km. b. Betelgeuse, with MV = -5.5 mag, mv = 0.8 mag, and R = 650Rsun. c. The galaxy M31, with R = 30 kpc at a distance D = 0.7Mpc. d. The Coma cluster of galaxies, with R = 3 Mpc at a distance D = 100 Mpc.arrow_forwardHow astronomers determine the distance of a galaxy? Explain.arrow_forward
- 4) Calculate the redshift of a galaxy with a recessional velocity of 0.68c. (2arrow_forwardA galaxy is found to be receding at a velocity of 3.0 x 104 km-s-1. Calculate the distance to the galaxy.arrow_forwardWhat is the name for the spherical cloud of thinly scattered stars and globular clusters that contain only about 2 percent as many stars as the disk of the galaxy and has very little gas and dust? a. the core b. the nuclear bulge c. the spiral arms d. the halo e. none of thesearrow_forward
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