Galaxy Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Galaxy – A gravitationally bound system of stars, remnants, gas, dust, and dark matter.
Dark Matter – Makes up 85 % of a galaxy’s total mass; inferred from flat rotation curves and velocity dispersions.
Hubble Sequence – Visual classification into Ellipticals (E0‑E7), Spirals (Sa‑Sc, SB a‑c), Irregulars, plus special types (lenticular S0, dwarf, etc.).
Density‑Wave Theory – Spiral arms are quasi‑stationary overdensities that trigger star formation as gas passes through.
Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) – Central supermassive black hole accreting matter; manifests as Seyfert, quasar, blazar, or radio galaxy depending on luminosity and viewing angle.
Starburst Galaxy – Forms stars at rates > 10 M☉ yr⁻¹ (LIRGs) or > 100 M☉ yr⁻¹ (ULIRGs); usually merger‑driven.
Large‑Scale Structure – Galaxies group → clusters → superclusters → cosmic web of filaments and voids.
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📌 Must Remember
Mass composition: 85 % dark matter, a few percent visible stars/gas.
Elliptical sub‑classes: E0 = spherical, E7 = most elongated.
Spiral sub‑classes: Sa (tight arms, large bulge) → Sc (loose arms, small bulge).
Flat rotation curves → dark‑matter halo (V ≈ constant at large radii).
Baryonic Tully–Fisher: \(M{\rm baryon} \propto V{\rm flat}^4\).
Effective radius \(R{\rm e}\): radius enclosing 50 % of total light.
Petrosian radius captures 100 % of light for exponential disks, 80 % for de Vaucouleurs profiles.
LIRG luminosity threshold: \(L{\rm IR} > 10^{11}\,L{\odot}\) → SFR ≥ 18 M☉ yr⁻¹.
ULIRG threshold: \(L{\rm IR} > 10^{12}\,L{\odot}\) → SFR ≥ 180 M☉ yr⁻¹.
Milky Way: Barred spiral (SB bc) with a central SMBH of a few × 10⁶ M☉.
Typical galaxy size: 1 kpc – 100 kpc (≈ 3 kly – 300 kly).
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🔄 Key Processes
Galaxy Formation (ΛCDM)
Small dark‑matter overdensities collapse → halos.
Gas falls into halos, shocks, then cools → first stars (Pop III).
Starburst Trigger
Interaction → tidal compression → gas inflow → rapid star formation.
Merger → Morphology Change
Major merger: two comparable‑mass disks → elliptical remnant + possible AGN.
Minor merger (cannibalism): large galaxy absorbs dwarf, little structural change.
AGN Fueling
Bar or interaction drives gas inward → accretion disc → high‑energy emission.
Spiral‑Arm Star Formation (Density Wave)
Gas enters overdense wave → shock → collapse → OB stars light up arm.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Elliptical vs Spiral
Shape: Elliptical = ellipsoidal, same from any angle; Spiral = thin disk + bulge + arms.
Gas/Dust: Elliptical = little, low SFR; Spiral = abundant, ongoing star formation.
Stellar Orbits: Random (velocity dispersion) vs ordered rotation.
Barred vs Unbarred Spiral
Barred (SB) have a linear stellar bar; can channel gas to the nucleus.
Unbarred (S) lack a bar; gas inflow relies on other mechanisms.
LIRG vs ULIRG
LIRG: \(10^{11}–10^{12}\,L{\odot}\), SFR ≈ 18–180 M☉ yr⁻¹.
ULIRG: \(>10^{12}\,L{\odot}\), SFR > 180 M☉ yr⁻¹, often merger‑driven.
Seyfert vs Quasar
Seyfert: nucleus bright but host galaxy visible.
Quasar: nucleus outshines host; seen at high redshift.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All galaxies are spirals.” – Only 70 % of luminous galaxies are spirals; ellipticals dominate dense clusters.
“Dark matter is visible in rotation curves only for spirals.” – Ellipticals show dark halos via stellar velocity dispersion and weak lensing.
“Barred spirals are rare.” – Roughly half of all spirals host a bar.
“AGN always require a merger.” – Secular processes (e.g., bar‑driven inflow) can also fuel AGN.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Galaxy as a city”:
Dark matter = city’s invisible foundation.
Stars = citizens (old vs young districts).
Gas/dust = roads and utilities; when traffic jams (interactions) occur, a construction boom (starburst) happens.
Flat rotation curve = “speed limit” that stays high far from the downtown (visible stars), implying a hidden mass belt (halo).
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Dwarf Ellipticals vs Dwarf Spheroidals: Both low‑mass, but spheroidals are often satellite galaxies with very low surface brightness.
Flocculent vs Grand‑Design Spirals: Density‑wave theory best describes grand‑design arms; flocculent arms arise from local instabilities.
LINERs: Weak AGN‑like emission; can also be powered by old stellar populations or shocks.
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📍 When to Use Which
Classify morphology: Use visual inspection → Hubble type (E, S, SB, Irr).
Measure size:
Large, well‑resolved galaxies: use effective radius \(R{\rm e}\).
Survey data (SDSS): adopt Petrosian radius for consistent photometry.
Near‑IR studies: apply 2MASS isophotal method (Kₛ‑band, 20 mag arcsec⁻²).
Estimate dark‑matter content:
Spirals: fit rotation curve (V ≈ constant → halo mass).
Ellipticals: use stellar velocity dispersion + Jeans modeling or weak lensing.
Identify AGN:
Optical spectra: broad vs narrow lines → Seyfert 1/2.
Radio/X‑ray: strong jets → radio galaxy or blazar (orientation dependent).
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
Flat rotation curve → dark halo (look for constant V beyond optical radius).
Tidal tails + disturbed morphology → recent merger / starburst.
Strong 21 cm emission but weak optical light → gas‑rich dwarf or irregular.
High infrared luminosity + compact radio core → ULIRG with embedded AGN.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
“All elliptical galaxies are featureless.” – Ellipticals can host faint shells or dust lanes from past minor mergers.
“Barred spirals always have higher star‑formation rates than unbarred.” – Bars can both enhance central SFR and deplete gas in the disk; net effect varies.
“A flat rotation curve proves dark matter alone.” – Modified gravity theories exist, but dark matter is overwhelmingly supported by multiple lines of evidence (lensing, dispersion).
“Quasars are always more distant than Seyferts.” – Luminosity, not distance, defines quasars; some low‑z objects qualify if nuclear output dominates.
“All LIRGs are merger remnants.” – While many are, some are isolated, gas‑rich disks with unusually high SFRs.
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