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Active Galaxies Educational Unit |
Active Galaxies Education Unit
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| Active Galaxies and the GLAST
Education and Public Outreach Program
Busy educators sometimes have trouble finding ways to help their students
feel the excitement of science in action. As a part of its educational
effort, the NASA Education and Public Outreach group at Sonoma State University
(SSU) has put together a series of activities presentation based on the
science of one of NASA’s exciting space missions: the Gamma-ray Large
Area Space Telescope (GLAST). |
| National Content Standards Matrix
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Activity 1: Building Perspectives with Active Galaxies
Background Information: The type of active galaxy we see depends on the way that we see it. If we see the accretion disk and gas torus edge on, the galaxy is called a radio galaxy. The torus of cool gas and dust blocks most of the radiation from the inner black hole and its nearby environment, so the most obvious features are the radio emitting jets and giant lobes well outside the galaxy. If the disk is tipped slightly to our line of sight, we can see higher-energy light from the accretion disk inside the gas torus in addition to the lower energy radio waves. This kind of AG is called a Seyfert galaxy (named after American astronomer Carl Seyfert, who first catalogued these galaxies in 1943). It looks much like a normal galaxy but with a very bright core, and may be giving off high-energy photons like X-rays. If the galaxy is very far away from us, we may see the core as a star-like object even if the fainter surrounding galaxy is undetected. In this case, the galaxy is called a quasar, which is short for quasi-stellar radio source (so-named because the first ones discovered appeared to be star-like through a telescope, but emitted copious radio waves, unlike “normal” stars). The first quasar to be discovered, dubbed 3C273, was found to be a galaxy at a very large distance by astronomer Martin Schmidt in 1963. If the tip angle is 90 degrees, we can be looking straight down a jet. This type of active galaxy is called a blazar. From blazars we see very high-energy gamma ray photons. The first blazar to be discovered, BL Lac (and after which we get the term “blazar”) was found in 1926 to change in brightness, but was thought to be a normal star! It wasn’t until the late 1970s that its galactic nature was truly revealed. In sum, the basic components of an active galaxy are: a supermassive black hole core, an accretion disk surrounding it, and a torus of gas and dust, and in some (but not all!) highly focused jets of matter and energy. The type of active galaxy we see depends on the way we see the galaxy: radio galaxies, Seyferts, quasars and blazars.
Extension Activities: Compare and contrast the students’ drawings to those on the GLAST Active Galaxies Poster for the different viewing angles. Discuss how this activity changes their perspectives about how they view and interpret what they see in the Universe. Transfer Activities: Have the students examine and draw everyday objects from different angles. Pass the drawings around to other students and see if they can identify the object, especially if the viewing angle is unfamiliar. Lesson Adaptations: Visually impaired students may have difficulty constructing the models and drawing them. Put the model in their hands, and let them note by touch how the model feels different if they can only access one part of it at a time (for example, a single cone/jet). They can examine how the model feels different if they keep their hand flat, fingers extended, and can only touch the model that way. In that example, the opening of the cone will feel like a circle, and the torus will feel flat. Have them describe how limiting their ability to touch the model limits their ability to identify its parts.
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Activity 2: Zooming in on Active
Galaxies
Now let’s consider a real AG: the double-lobed radio galaxy NGC 4261, which is located approximately 100 million light years from Earth. The Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based radio images (Figure 1, on page 5) of NGC 4261 shows radio lobes that span some 100,000 light years out from a spiral-shaped disk of gas and dust 400 light years in diameter. Presumably, a small but supermassive black hole “engine” lies at the center of the nucleus with a mass 1.2 billion times the mass of the Sun and contained in a space about the size of the solar system - about 6 billion kilometers. Imagine that! How much detail can we actually see with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in a galaxy 100 million light years away? The smallest objects HST can discern have an angle of about 0.1 arcseconds (about 0.00005 times the width of the full Moon). Using the small angle approximation (see activity on page 12) this angular diameter translates into a linear size of 460 trillion kilometers at the distance of NGC 4261! This is over 100,000 times larger than the effective size of the black hole. That’s why we can’t directly see the black hole at the core of the galaxy. Rather, we infer the existence and the properties of the black hole indirectly by observing the effect it has on the gas and stars surrounding it. The GLAST observatory, designed to detect gamma rays from active galaxies, will have a resolution of roughly 0.5 arcminutes (about 1/60th the width of the full Moon). Although no current detection technology exists that can see the central black hole in an active galaxy, GLAST will be able to detect gamma rays produced by the jets with unprecedented sensitivity. Such data will help us understand the physical processes that are going on in the nucleus and the supermassive black hole engine that fuels it. Additional Background:
In the small angle approximation, if any two of the quantities are known,
the third can be calculated. In astronomy, the angular diameter is usually
measured directly and the equation is used to calculate the distance or
the physical diameter of the object. Since distances to astronomical objects
are usually much larger than their linear sizes, this approximation is
of great use in all branches and at all levels of astronomy!
Note for the teacher: Just like with hands, some people are right-eyed and others left-eyed. The instructions for the template construction below assume the student will be using their right eye. When the students are constructing the template, they can reverse left and right in the directions if they prefer to use their left eye.
Procedure:
Transfer Activities: Lesson Adaptations:
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Activity 3: Light Travel Time and the size of Active Galaxies
object arrives after a measurable time difference from the arrival of the first photons. Although the object emitted a sudden flash of light, we observe a gradual increase in brightness that lasts a full week, from the first recorded incident. In other words, the flash is stretched out over a time interval equal to the difference in the light travel time between the nearest and most remote observable regions of the object. If an object is 1 light-year in diameter, it will take 1 year longer for the signal from the far side of the object to be detected than the signal from the near side. To calculate the diameter of the emission region from the duration of the brightness variation we multiply the velocity of light (called c which equals 3x 10^8 m/s), by the length of time (called t or “delta t” or Δt) it takes the AG to change brightness. When multiplied together they tell you the size of the emitting region: Size of emitting region = (speed of light) x (time of variation) Astronomers refer to this technique as using the light travel time (ct) to find the size of an object. Example: A time variation of one week is observed. Determine the diameter of the AG’s active region: d = (speed of light) x (time of variation)
Procedures: Transfer Activities:
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Glossary
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Detailed Standards
For Each Activity Content Standard A: Science as Inquiry Abilities
necessary to do scientific inquiry
Activity 2: Zooming
In on Active Galaxies National Science Education Standards: Content Standard A: Science as Inquiry National Science
Education Standards: |
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