Hubble Diagram | ||
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A simple diagram | ||
- Distances | ||
- Redshifts | ||
- The Diagram | ||
- Another diagram | ||
Distances | ||
Redshifts | ||
Conclusion | ||
Your Diagrams |
![]() A Simple DiagramTo give you a taste of how we go about proving the universe is expanding, and to give you some practice using SkyServer for astronomy research, this page will show you how to make a simple Hubble diagram, with only six galaxies. DistancesThe first step in creating a Hubble diagram is to plot the distances to several galaxies. Unfortunately, measuring distances in astronomy is extremely difficult; but fortunately, all you need for a Hubble diagram are relative distances to galaxies, not necessarily their actual or "absolute" distances measured in miles or light-years. Relative distances are measured with respect to a convenient but arbitrary standard like the Andromeda galaxy or the Virgo cluster: we can say that the Perseus Cluster is five times the distance of the Virgo Cluster, for example. To measure relative distance, astronomers need some way to compare galaxies. Since galaxies are so similar, astronomers assume that they all have the same average properties, such as brightness and size. When we assume that two galaxies' intrinsic brightness and size are the same, any differences in brightness or size between them are due only to differing distances away from us. For example, we can assume that a galaxy that appears twice as large as another galaxy is half as far from us.
One of the easiest ways to compare galaxies is to compare their magnitudes. Magnitude
can be used to measure the brightness of any celestial object, including stars and galaxies.
In magnitude, higher numbers correspond to fainter objects, lower numbers to brighter
objects; the very brightest objects have negative magnitudes. An increase of one
number in magnitude corresponds to an increase in brightness by a factor of about
2.51 - a magnitude four object is 2.51 times brighter than a magnitude five object.
The sun has magnitude -26. The brightest star in the Northern sky, Sirius, has
magnitude The faintest object you can see with your eyes has a magnitude of about 6. The faintest object the SDSS telescope can see has a magnitude of about 23. SDSS measures magnitudes in five wavelengths of light: ultraviolet (u), green (g), red (r), two infrared wavelengths (i and z).
If we assume that all six galaxies emit roughly the same amount of light, then the differences in their magnitudes are due only to their different distances from us. If one galaxy has a higher magnitude than another, then we assume that it must be farther away. In the next section of this project, you will find out how to turn the magnitudes into actual relative distances. But for now, you can use magnitudes to substitute for distances when you make your simple Hubble diagram.
RedshiftsRedshift is a measure of how fast a celestial object is moving relative to us. If you have ever stood by the side of the road as a car passed by, you have a sense for what redshift is. As the car moves toward you, the pitch of its engine sounds higher than the engine of a stationary car. As the car moves away from you, the engine's pitch is lower than for the engine of a stationary car. The reason for this change is the Doppler effect, named for its discoverer, Austrian physicist Christian Doppler. As the car moves toward you, the sound waves that carry the sound of its engine are compressed. As the car moves away from you, these sound waves are stretched. The same effect happens with light waves. If an object moves toward us, the light waves it emits will be compressed - the wavelength will be shorter, so the light will become bluer. If an object moves away from us, its light waves will be stretched, and will become redder. The degree of "redshift" or "blueshift" is directly related to the object's speed in the direction we are looking. The animation below schematically shows what a redshift and blueshift might look like, again using a car as an example. The speeds of cars are far too small for us to notice any redshift or blueshift. But galaxies are moving fast enough with respect to us that we can see a noticeable shift.
Astronomers can measure exactly how much redshift or blueshift a galaxy has by looking at its spectrum. A spectrum (the plural is "spectra") measures how much light an object emits as a function of wavelength. The spectra of stars and galaxies almost always show a series of discrete lines that form when certain atoms or molecules emit or absorb light. These "spectral emission and absorption lines" always appear at the same wavelengths, so they make a convenient marker for redshift or blueshift. If astronomers look at a galaxy and see one line at a longer wavelength than it would be on Earth, they would know that the galaxy was redshifted and moving away from us. If they see the same lines at shorter wavelengths, they would know that the galaxy was blueshifted and moving toward us. By the end of the survey, the SDSS will have looked at the spectra of more than one million galaxies. Each spectrum is run through a computer program that automatically determines the redshift. The program outputs an image like the one below, with spectral lines marked. The "z" number at the bottom of the image shows the redshift. Positive z indicates redshift and negative z indicates blueshift.
Spectra for galaxies are stored in the SDSS's spectroscopic database. They are organized into plates and fibers, corresponding to the plate and fiber used by the SDSS spectrometer to collect them.
Making the DiagramNow that you have magnitudes and redshifts for six galaxies, you are ready to make a Hubble diagram. Use a graphing program such as Microsoft Excel to make your diagram. The instructions below tell you how to make the graph in Excel; to use other graphing programs, you would follow similar steps.
Do your data really show a linear relationship between magnitude and redshift? When scientists try to find relationships in data, they often speak of a "model": in this case, a linear model relates magnitude to redshift. Scientists often speak of the "fit" between the data and the model. The fit can be described with a percentage that shows how close the points lie to the place where they should lie if the model were true. Because every experiment has some error and every observation has some statistical uncertainty, the fit is never 100% accurate. Generally, scientists consider a fit above 90% to show that the model accurately predicts the data.
Another Hubble DiagramYou have now constructed a simple Hubble diagram containing six galaxies. The data in the diagram fit well with a straight line. Now, try making the same diagram with different galaxies.
In Exercise 6, you used the same method you used in Exercises 3 and 4: you graphed magnitude as a function of redshift. So why does the graph you got look so different? The answer is that the assumption that underlies both graphs is sometimes true, and sometimes false. To make the Hubble diagrams, you assumed that magnitude could substitute for distance, which in turn required you to assume that all galaxies had the same average brightness. Galaxies do have average properties. But if every galaxy were exactly the same, astronomy would be quite a boring subject. Galaxies also show a great deal of variation, and many astronomers make their careers studying these variations. Unfortunately, variations in galaxy properties make constructing a Hubble diagram trickier than simply graphing magnitude and redshift. In the next section, you will learn some other ways astronomers measure relative distance to other galaxies. In the section after that, you will learn more about how to measure redshift. Then, you will use this knowledge to construct a better Hubble diagram, one that does not fall into the trap that this simple diagram fell into. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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