
5.1.3 The Formation and Evolution of Galaxies
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Other
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11th Grade
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Practice Problem
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Hard
Caitlin Ford
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12 Slides • 6 Questions
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The Formation and Evolution of Galaxies
5.1.3
By Caitlin Ford
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Objectives
- distinguish between the top-down and bottom-up models of the formation of galaxies
- explain the monolithic collapse model of galaxy formation
- describe the hierarchical model of galaxy formation
- identify the role of supermassive black holes and dark matter in galactic evolution
- discuss the evolution of galaxies through galaxy mergers
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Open Ended
How do YOU think galaxies form?
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Top-Down Model
States that galaxies formed from a vast cloud of gas and dust.
This cloud broke into smaller clouds.
Gravity compressed these clouds into galaxies.
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Bottom-Up Model
States that instead of a vast cloud of gas, galaxies formed from small clumps of matter.
Gravity compressed these clumps into dwarf galaxies that merged to form larger galaxies.
This model is accepted by most astronomers today!
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Monolithic Collapse Model
A top-down model.
States that galaxies formed quickly and all at once.
"Monolithic" = all galaxies formed from a common initial material or source.
This model fails to explain:
- the variety of galactic shapes and sizes
- the presence of supermassive black holes in the centers
- the large-scale structure of the universe.
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Hierarchical Model
A bottom-up model.
States that galaxies formed from clumps of matter that gained mass and then grew into larger structures.
Smaller galaxies combined to form larger galaxies.
This is widely accepted because observational evidence supports it.
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Labelling
Please label the model. Decide which model it is by labeling the empty space at the top.
small lumps of matter
dwarf galaxies merging
Bottom-Up Model
galaxies form
Top-Down Model
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Dropdown
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Formation of Different Types of Galaxies
Spiral Galaxies - stars form in central disk, then fans out. Older stars are near the core, and younger stars are on the arms.
Elliptical Galaxies - when most stars form at the same time, the galaxy is a disk shape. Spiral galaxies can also merge and become elliptical galaxies.
Irregular Galaxies - protogalaxies, extremely old and eventually merge into other types of galaxies.
Lenticular Galaxies - early and disk-shaped, merged into other galaxy types
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Dark Matter
Dark Matter - a mysterious kind of invisible matter, does not emit electromagnetic waves, cannot be seen or studied.
Cold Dark Matter model - dark matter mixed with visible matter when atoms formed after the Big Bang and later helped in the formation of larger structures.
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Black Holes
According to the hierarchical model, supermassive black holes might have formed from the accretion of material at the center of a protogalaxy or by the direct collapse of a gas cloud due to gravity.
These SMBH skip stages of star formation and were formed in a short time (a few million years).
Energy and radiation from SMBH heat up and push out gas, which stops galaxies from collapsing and creating new stars. This affects the shape and structure of galaxies.
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Merging Galaxies
Galaxies are continuing to merge, even today! They are moving through space. One galaxy's gravity will pull on another galaxy's, and eventually collide.
This can cause new stars to form, it can change the orbit of stars, and it can fling stars into space.
The Milky Way and Andromeda are expected to collide in 4 to 5 billion years.
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Reorder
Order the stages of a top-down model of galaxy formation.
huge cloud of matter exists
break down into large, galaxy-sized lumps
break down into smaller clouds
clouds are compressed and galaxies form
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Multiple Choice
Which of the following best describes a galaxy merger?
two galaxies pass through each other without interacting
two galaxies collide and merge over millions or billions of years
a large galaxy absorbs a smaller galaxy
a galaxy is destroyed by another galaxy
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Open Ended
How are supermassive black holes at the center of galaxies different from other black holes?
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Great job!
Today, you learned:
- the difference between the top-down and bottom-up models
- the monolithic collapse model of galaxy formation
- the cold dark matter (CDM) model of galaxy formation
- the role of dark matter and supermassive black holes in galactic evolution
- how galaxies merge
The Formation and Evolution of Galaxies
5.1.3
By Caitlin Ford
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