A galactic halo is an extended, roughly spherical component of a galaxy which extends beyond the main, visible component. Several distinct components of a galaxy comprise its halo:
The distinction between the halo and the main body of the galaxy is clearest in spiral galaxies, where the spherical shape of the halo contrasts with the flat disc. In an elliptical galaxy, there is no sharp transition between the other components of the galaxy and the halo.
A halo can be studied by observing its effect on the passage of light from distant bright objects like quasars that are in line of sight beyond the galaxy in question.
Components of the galactic halo
Stellar halo
The stellar halo is a nearly spherical population of field stars and globular clusters. It surrounds most disk galaxies as well as some elliptical galaxies of type cD.
A low amount (about one percent) of a galaxy's stellar mass resides in
the stellar halo, meaning its luminosity is much lower than other
components of the galaxy.
The Milky Way's stellar halo contains globular clusters, RR Lyrae stars with low metal content, and subdwarfs.
In our stellar halo, stars tend to be old (most are greater than 12
billion years old) and metal-poor, but there are also halo star clusters
with observed metal content similar to disk stars.
The halo stars of the Milky Way have an observed radial velocity
dispersion of about 200 km/s and a low average velocity of rotation of
about 50 km/s. Star formation in the stellar halo of the Milky Way ceased long ago.
Galactic corona
A
galactic corona is a distribution of gas extending far away from the
center of the galaxy. It can be detected by the distinct emission
spectrum it gives off, showing the presence of HI gas (H one, 21 cm microwave line) and other features detectable by X-ray spectroscopy.
Dark matter halo
The dark matter halo is a theorized distribution of dark matter
which extends throughout the galaxy extending far beyond its visible
components. The mass of the dark matter halo is far greater than the
mass of the other components of the galaxy. Its existence is
hypothesized in order to account for the gravitational potential that
determines the dynamics of bodies within galaxies. The nature of dark
matter halos is an important area in current research in cosmology, in particular its relation to galactic formation and evolution.
The Navarro–Frenk–White profile is a widely accepted density profile of the dark matter halo determined through numerical simulations. It represents the mass density of the dark matter halo as a function of , the distance from the galactic center:
where is a characteristic radius for the model, is the critical density (with being the Hubble constant), and
is a dimensionless constant. The invisible halo component cannot extend
with this density profile indefinitely, however; this would lead to a
diverging integral when calculating mass. It does, however, provide a
finite gravitational potential for all . Most measurements that can be made are relatively insensitive to the outer halo's mass distribution. This is a consequence of Newton's laws,
which state that if the shape of the halo is spheroidal or elliptical
there will be no net gravitational effect from halo mass a distance from the galactic center on an object that is closer to the galactic center than . The only dynamical variable related to the extent of the halo that can be constrained is the escape velocity:
the fastest-moving stellar objects still gravitationally bound to the
Galaxy can give a lower bound on the mass profile of the outer edges of
the dark halo.
Formation of galactic halos
The formation of stellar halos occurs naturally in a cold dark matter
model of the universe in which the evolution of systems such as halos
occurs from the bottom-up, meaning the large scale structure of galaxies
is formed starting with small objects. Halos, which are composed of
both baryonic
and dark matter, form by merging with each other. Evidence suggests
that the formation of galactic halos may also be due to the effects of
increased gravity and the presence of primordial black holes.
The gas from halo mergers goes toward the formation of the central
galactic components, while stars and dark matter remain in the galactic
halo.
On the other hand, the halo of the Milky Way Galaxy is thought to derive from the Gaia Sausage.
Cosmochemistry (from Ancient Greekκόσμος (kósmos) 'universe', and χημεία (khēmeía) 'chemistry') or chemical cosmology is the study of the chemical composition of matter in the universe and the processes that led to those compositions. This is done primarily through the study of the chemical composition of meteorites and other physical samples. Given that the asteroid parent bodies of meteorites were some of the first solid material to condense from the early solar nebula, cosmochemists are generally, but not exclusively, concerned with the objects contained within the Solar System.
History
In 1938, Swiss mineralogist Victor Goldschmidt
and his colleagues compiled a list of what they called "cosmic
abundances" based on their analysis of several terrestrial and meteorite
samples.
Goldschmidt justified the inclusion of meteorite composition data into
his table by claiming that terrestrial rocks were subjected to a
significant amount of chemical change due to the inherent processes of
the Earth and the atmosphere. This meant that studying terrestrial rocks
exclusively would not yield an accurate overall picture of the chemical
composition of the cosmos. Therefore, Goldschmidt concluded that
extraterrestrial material must also be included to produce more accurate
and robust data. This research is considered to be the foundation of
modern cosmochemistry.
During the 1950s and 1960s, cosmochemistry became more accepted as a science. Harold Urey, widely considered to be one of the fathers of cosmochemistry,
engaged in research that eventually led to an understanding of the
origin of the elements and the chemical abundance of stars. In 1956,
Urey and his colleague, German scientist Hans Suess, published the first table of cosmic abundances to include isotopes based on meteorite analysis.
The continued refinement of analytical instrumentation throughout the 1960s, especially that of mass spectrometry, allowed cosmochemists to perform detailed analyses of the isotopic abundances of elements within meteorites. in 1960, John Reynolds
determined, through the analysis of short-lived nuclides within
meteorites, that the elements of the Solar System were formed before the
Solar System itself which began to establish a timeline of the processes of the early Solar System.
Meteorites
Meteorites
are one of the most important tools that cosmochemists have for
studying the chemical nature of the Solar System. Many meteorites come
from material that is as old as the Solar System itself, and thus
provide scientists with a record from the early solar nebula. Carbonaceous chondrites
are especially primitive; that is they have retained many of their
chemical properties since their formation 4.56 billion years ago, and are therefore a major focus of cosmochemical investigations.
The most primitive meteorites also contain a small amount of material (< 0.1%) which is now recognized to be presolar grains
that are older than the Solar System itself, and which are derived
directly from the remnants of the individual supernovae that supplied
the dust from which the Solar System formed. These grains are
recognizable from their exotic chemistry which is alien to the Solar
System (such as matrixes of graphite, diamond, or silicon carbide). They
also often have isotope ratios which are not those of the rest of the
Solar System (in particular, the Sun), and which differ from each other,
indicating sources in a number of different explosive supernova events.
Meteorites also may contain interstellar dust grains, which have
collected from non-gaseous elements in the interstellar medium, as one
type of composite cosmic dust ("stardust").
On 30 July 2015, scientists reported that upon the first touchdown of the Philae lander on comet67/P's surface, measurements by the COSAC and Ptolemy instruments revealed sixteen organic compounds, four of which were seen for the first time on a comet, including acetamide, acetone, methyl isocyanate and propionaldehyde.
In 2004, scientists reported detecting the spectral signatures of anthracene and pyrene in the ultraviolet light emitted by the Red Rectangle nebula
(no other such complex molecules had ever been found before in outer
space). This discovery was considered a confirmation of a hypothesis
that as nebulae of the same type as the Red Rectangle approach the ends
of their lives, convection currents cause carbon and hydrogen in the
nebulae's core to get caught in stellar winds, and radiate outward.
As they cool, the atoms supposedly bond to each other in various ways
and eventually form particles of a million or more atoms. The scientists
inferred that since they discovered polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
(PAHs)—which may have been vital in the formation of early life on
Earth—in a nebula, by necessity they must originate in nebulae.
In August 2009, NASA scientists identified one of the fundamental chemical building-blocks of life (the amino acid glycine) in a comet for the first time.
In 2010, fullerenes (or "buckyballs") were detected in nebulae.
Fullerenes have been implicated in the origin of life; according to
astronomer Letizia Stanghellini, "It's possible that buckyballs from
outer space provided seeds for life on Earth."
In August 2011, findings by NASA, based on studies of meteorites found on Earth, suggests DNA and RNA components (adenine, guanine and related organic molecules), building blocks for life as we know it, may be formed extraterrestrially in outer space.
In October 2011, scientists reported that cosmic dust contains complex organic matter ("amorphous organic solids with a mixed aromatic-aliphatic structure") that could be created naturally, and rapidly, by stars.
On August 29, 2012, astronomers at Copenhagen University reported the detection of a specific sugar molecule, glycolaldehyde, in a distant star system. The molecule was found around the protostellar binary IRAS 16293-2422, which is located 400 light years from Earth. Glycolaldehyde is needed to form ribonucleic acid, or RNA, which is similar in function to DNA.
This finding suggests that complex organic molecules may form in
stellar systems prior to the formation of planets, eventually arriving
on young planets early in their formation.
In 2013, the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA Project) confirmed that researchers have discovered an important pair of prebiotic molecules in the icy particles in interstellar space
(ISM). The chemicals, found in a giant cloud of gas about 25,000
light-years from Earth in ISM, may be a precursor to a key component of
DNA and the other may have a role in the formation of an important amino acid. Researchers found a molecule called cyanomethanimine, which produces adenine, one of the four nucleobases that form the "rungs" in the ladder-like structure of DNA. The other molecule, called ethanamine, is thought to play a role in forming alanine,
one of the twenty amino acids in the genetic code. Previously,
scientists thought such processes took place in the very tenuous gas
between the stars. The new discoveries, however, suggest that the
chemical formation sequences for these molecules occurred not in gas,
but on the surfaces of ice grains in interstellar space.
NASA ALMA scientist Anthony Remijan stated that finding these molecules
in an interstellar gas cloud means that important building blocks for
DNA and amino acids can 'seed' newly formed planets with the chemical
precursors for life.
In physics, relativistic beaming (also known as Doppler beaming, Doppler boosting, or the headlight effect) is the process by which relativistic effects modify the apparent luminosity of emitting matter that is moving at speeds close to the speed of light. In an astronomical context, relativistic beaming commonly occurs in two oppositely-directed relativistic jets of plasma that originate from a central compact object that is accreting matter. Accreting compact objects and relativistic jets are invoked to explain x-ray binaries, gamma-ray bursts, and, on a much larger scale, active galactic nuclei (quasars
are also associated with an accreting compact object, but are thought
to be merely a particular variety of active galactic nuclei, or AGNs).
Beaming affects the apparent brightness of a moving object.
Consider a cloud of gas moving relative to the observer and emitting
electromagnetic radiation. If the gas is moving towards the observer, it
will be brighter than if it were at rest, but if the gas is moving
away, it will appear fainter. The magnitude of the effect is illustrated
by the AGN jets of the galaxies M87 and 3C 31
(see images at right). M87 has twin jets aimed almost directly towards
and away from Earth; the jet moving towards Earth is clearly visible
(the long, thin blueish feature in the top image), while the other jet
is so much fainter it is not visible.
In 3C 31, both jets (labeled in the lower figure) are at roughly right
angles to our line of sight, and thus, both are visible. The upper jet
actually points slightly more in Earth's direction and is therefore
brighter.
Relativistically moving objects are beamed due to a variety of physical effects. Light aberration causes most of the photons to be emitted along the object's direction of motion. The Doppler effect
changes the energy of the photons by red- or blue-shifting them.
Finally, time intervals as measured by clocks moving alongside the
emitting object are different from those measured by an observer on
Earth due to time dilation
and photon arrival time effects. How all of these effects modify the
brightness, or apparent luminosity, of a moving object is determined by
the equation describing the relativistic Doppler effect (which is why relativistic beaming is also known as Doppler beaming).
A simple jet model
The
simplest model for a jet is one where a single, homogeneous sphere is
travelling towards the Earth at nearly the speed of light. This simple
model is also an unrealistic one, but it does illustrate the physical
process of beaming quite well.
Synchrotron spectrum and the spectral index
Relativistic jets emit most of their energy via synchrotron emission.
In our simple model the sphere contains highly relativistic electrons
and a steady magnetic field. Electrons inside the blob travel at speeds
just a tiny fraction below the speed of light and are whipped around by
the magnetic field. Each change in direction by an electron is
accompanied by the release of energy in the form of a photon. With
enough electrons and a powerful enough magnetic field the relativistic
sphere can emit a huge number of photons, ranging from those at
relatively weak radio frequencies to powerful X-ray photons.
The figure of the sample spectrum shows basic features of a
simple synchrotron spectrum. At low frequencies the jet sphere is opaque
and its luminosity increases with frequency until it peaks and begins
to decline. In the sample image this peak frequency occurs at . At frequencies higher than this the jet sphere is transparent. The luminosity decreases with frequency until a break frequency is reached, after which it declines more rapidly. In the same image the break frequency occurs when .
The sharp break frequency occurs because at very high frequencies the
electrons which emit the photons lose most of their energy very rapidly.
A sharp decrease in the number of high energy electrons means a sharp
decrease in the spectrum.
The changes in slope in the synchrotron spectrum are parameterized with a spectral index. The spectral index, α, over a given frequency range is simply the slope on a diagram of vs. . (Of course for α to have real meaning the spectrum must be very nearly a straight line across the range in question.)
Beaming equation
In the simple jet model of a single homogeneous sphere the observed luminosity is related to the intrinsic luminosity as
where
The observed luminosity therefore depends on the speed of the jet and
the angle to the line of sight through the Doppler factor, , and also on the properties inside the jet, as shown by the exponent with the spectral index.
The beaming equation can be broken down into a series of three effects:
Relativistic aberration
Time dilation
Blue- or redshifting
Aberration
Aberration is the change in an object's apparent direction caused by the relative transverse motion of the observer. In inertial systems it is equal and opposite to the light time correction.
In everyday life aberration is a well-known phenomenon. Consider a
person standing in the rain on a day when there is no wind. If the
person is standing still, then the rain drops will follow a path that is
straight down to the ground. However, if the person is moving, for
example in a car, the rain will appear to be approaching at an angle.
This apparent change in the direction of the incoming raindrops is
aberration.
The amount of aberration depends on the speed of the emitted
object or wave relative to the observer. In the example above this would
be the speed of a car compared to the speed of the falling rain. This
does not change when the object is moving at a speed close to .
Like the classic and relativistic effects, aberration depends on: 1)
the speed of the emitter at the time of emission, and 2) the speed of
the observer at the time of absorption.
In the case of a relativistic jet, beaming (emission aberration)
will make it appear as if more energy is sent forward, along the
direction the jet is traveling. In the simple jet model a homogeneous
sphere will emit energy equally in all directions in the rest frame of
the sphere. In the rest frame of Earth the moving sphere will be
observed to be emitting most of its energy along its direction of
motion. The energy, therefore, is ‘beamed’ along that direction.
Quantitatively, aberration accounts for a change in luminosity of
Time dilation
Time dilation is a well-known consequence of special relativity and accounts for a change in observed luminosity of
Blue- or redshifting
Blue- or redshifting can change the observed luminosity at a particular frequency, but this is not a beaming effect.
Blueshifting accounts for a change in observed luminosity of
Lorentz invariants
A more-sophisticated method of deriving the beaming equations starts with the quantity . This quantity is a Lorentz invariant, so the value is the same in different reference frames.
Terminology
beamed, beaming
shorter terms for ‘relativistic beaming’
beta
the ratio of the jet speed to the speed of light, sometimes called ‘relativistic beta’
the jet on the far side of a source oriented close to the line of sight, can be very faint and difficult to observe
Doppler factor
a mathematical expression which measures the strength (or weakness) of relativistic effects in AGN, including beaming, based on the jet speed and its angle to the line of sight with Earth
flat spectrum
a term for a non-thermal spectrum that emits a great deal of energy at the higher frequencies when compared to the lower frequencies
intrinsic luminosity
the luminosity from the jet in the rest frame of the jet
a high velocity (close to c) stream of plasma emanating from the polar direction of an AGN
observed luminosity
the luminosity from the jet in the rest frame of Earth
spectral index
a measure of how a non-thermal spectrum changes with frequency. The smaller α is, the more significant the energy at higher frequencies is. Typically α is in the range of 0 to 2.
steep spectrum
a term for a non-thermal spectrum that emits little energy at the higher frequencies when compared to the lower frequencies
The Hayashi limit is a theoretical constraint upon the maximum radius of a star for a given mass. When a star is fully within hydrostatic equilibrium—a condition where the inward force of gravity is matched by the outward pressure
of the gas—the star can not exceed the radius defined by the Hayashi
limit. This has important implications for the evolution of a star, both
during the formulative contraction period and later when the star has
consumed most of its hydrogen supply through nuclear fusion.
A Hertzsprung-Russell diagram displays a plot of a star's surface temperature against the luminosity.
On this diagram, the Hayashi limit forms a nearly vertical line at
about 3,500 K. The outer layers of low temperature stars are always
convective, and models of stellar structure for fully convective stars
do not provide a solution to the right of this line. Thus in theory,
stars are constrained to remain to the left of this limit during all
periods when they are in hydrostatic equilibrium, and the region to the
right of the line forms a type of "forbidden zone". Note, however, that
there are exceptions to the Hayashi limit. These include collapsing protostars, as well as stars with magnetic fields that interfere with the internal transport of energy through convection.
Red giants
are stars that have expanded their outer envelope in order to support
the nuclear fusion of helium. This moves them up and to the right on the
H-R diagram. However, they are constrained by the Hayashi limit not to
expand beyond a certain radius. Stars that find themselves across the
Hayashi limit have large convection
currents in their interior driven by massive temperature gradients.
Additionally, those stars states are unstable so the stars rapidly
adjust their states, moving in the Hertzprung-Russel diagram until they
reach the Hayashi limit.
When lower mass stars in the main sequence start expanding and
becoming a red giant the stars revisit the Hayashi track. The Hayashi
limit constrains the asymptotic giant branch evolution of stars which is
important in the late evolution of stars and can be observed, for
example, in the ascending branches of the Hertzsprung–Russell diagrams
of globular clusters, which have stars of approximately the same age and
composition.
Despite its importance to protostars and late stage main sequence
stars, the Hayashi limit was only recognized in Hayashi’s paper in
1961. This late recognition may be because the properties of the Hayashi
track required numerical calculations that were not fully developed
before.
Derivation of the limit
We
can derive the relation between the luminosity, temperature and
pressure for a simple model for a fully convective star and from the
form of this relation we can infer the Hayashi limit. This is an
extremely crude model of what occurs in convective stars, but it has
good qualitative agreement with the full model with less complications.
We follow the derivation in Kippenhahn, Weigert, and Weiss in Stellar
Structure and Evolution.
Nearly all of the interior part of convective stars has an
adiabatic stratification (corrections to this are small for fully
convective regions), such that
We assume that this relation holds from the interior to the surface of
the star—the surface is called photosphere. We assume \grad_{adiabatic}
to be constant throughout the interior of the star with value 0.4.
However, we obtain the correct distinctive behavior.
For the interior we consider a simple polytropic relation between P and T:
With the index .
We assume the relation above to hold until the photosphere where we assume to have a simple absorption law
Then, we use the hydrostatic equilibrium equation and integrate it with respect to the radius to give us
For the solution in the interior we set ; in the P-T relation and then eliminate pressure of this equation.
Luminosity is given by the Stephan-Boltzmann law applied to a perfect black body:
.
Thus, any value of R corresponds to a certain point in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram.
Finally, after some algebra this is the equation for the Hayashi limit in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram:
With coefficients
,
Takeaways from plugin in and for a cool hydrogen ion dominated atmosphere opacity model ():
The Hayashi limit must be far to the right in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram which means temperatures have to be low.
The Hayashi limit must be very steep. The gradient of Luminosity with respect to temperature has to be large.
The Hayashi limit shifts slightly to the left in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram for increasing M.
These predictions are supported by numerical simulations of stars.
What happens when stars cross the limit
Until
now we have made no claims on the stability of locale to the left,
right or at the Hayashi limit in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram. To the
left of the Hayashi limit, we have and some part of the model is radiative. The model is fully convective at the Hayashi limit with . Models to the right of the Hayashi limit should have .
If a star is formed such that some region in its deep interior has large large convective fluxes with velocities . The convective fluxes of energy cooldown the interior rapidly until and the star has moved to the Hayashi limit. In fact, it can be shown from the mixing length model
that even a small excess can transport energy from the deep interior to
the surface by convective fluxes. This will happen within the short
timescale for the adjustment of convection which is still larger than
timescales for non-equilibrium processes in the star such as
hydrodynamic adjustment associated with the thermal time scale.
Hence, the limit between an “allowed” stable region (left) and a
“forbidden” unstable region (right) for stars of given M and composition
that are in hydrostatic equilibrium and have a fully adjusted
convection is the Hayashi limit.