Imagine taking a trip at the speed of light, the "ultimate speed limit" according to Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity; c = 186,000 miles/sec = 300,000 km/s = 3 x 10 10 cm/s (= 1 light-year/year). The effects of Special Relativity will have a profound effect upon space travel. Because mass increases as one's velocity approaches c, travel near the speed of light will be very expensive and will require spacecraft designs far different from those imagined on Sci-Fi TV programs; a phenomenon called time dilation, will cause space explorers traveling near the speed of light to age more slowly than their compatriots left behind on earth. For now we will ignore the details and set off on a journey to explore the Universe.
For an idea how long exploring the Universe would take at your favorite speed try this link at the University of Maryland; but remember to follow the speed limit.
Earth
from space- taken by the Apollo 11 astronauts. Visible through the clouds
are the continents of Africa and Europe.
The Moon - 1.5 light seconds from the Earth.
Current evidence
suggests that the moon may have been blasted away from the earth about
4.5 billion years ago when a Mars-sized "planetesimal" collided with the newly
formed earth.
More info at
Bill Arnett's "The Nine Planets".
Venus
- about 2 minutes away when it is closest,
would take almost 15 minutes when it is on the
other side of the sun. Venus was
thought originally to be our "sister planet"; visible as the "evening star"
or the "morning star". We now know that Venus has a toxic atmosphere with
sulfuric acid rain and a greenhouse effect that keeps the planet boiling hot.
For more info about Venus see Venus Introduction by
Calvin Hamilton or
Venus View
by Bill Arnett. Astronomy Pictures of the Day of
Venus.
Mariner at Venus
HST Image of Mars
Mars
- 4 minutes away on average. This image, taken
by the Hubble Space Telescope is a true color image showing the polar ice
cap. A meteorite which originated from Mars and landed in Antarctica shows
evidence for
Life on Mars
which may have existed over 3 billion years ago according to some
NASA scientists. Scientists at UCSD's Scripps Institution of Oceanography
dispute
the claim of Martian life, however. Mars is considered the most
hospitable place for life after the earth. For more info about Mars see
Mars Introduction
by Calvin Hamilton or
Mars View
by Bill Arnett.
A suite of
NASA Missions are now
carrying out detailed examintation of Mars. Mars Pathfinder landed on Mars
in July 1997; its Soujourner rover transmitted back spectacular images and
other data for over 3 months, despite a planned lifetime of 1 week.
Communication was lost with the spacecraft in October 1997.
Since May 1998
Mars Global Surveyor
has been orbiting the planet imaging and mapping its surface.
The Mars Climate Orbiter
mission, which was to begin operation in September 1999 was lost due to a
navigation
error caused by confusion between metric and English units.
The recent failures of the Mars Climate Orbiter
and its companion, the
Mars Polar Lander,
which lost contact during Mars landing in December 1999 are reminders of
the continuing difficulty of space exploration. More recently a pair of
orbiters and surface rovers rovers have provided stunning new views of
Mars, including definitive evidence of previous existence of surface water
on Mars.
Jupiter
is about 30 light minutes from the Sun (hence
about 20--40 light-minutes from Earth depending
upon the relative locations in orbit. Jupiter's
Great Red Spot is a gigantic storm in the upper atmosphere
Io
with its huge volcano
erupting fumes of sulfur. For more info about Jupiter
see Jupiter
Introduction, or
Jupiter
View, or
Jupiter APODs.
Saturn with its fantastic
rings is about
1 light hour from the Sun. These are "false
color" image from Voyager. Saturn's large satellite
Titan
is massive enough to have its own atmosphere, though probably too cold to
support life. For more info see
Saturn
Introduction, or
Saturn View,
or Saturn
APODs.
Neptune
- 4 hours away, is, until March 1999, the outermost
planet in the Solar System due to Pluto's highly elongated orbit.
Because Neptune receives less than one tenth of one percent of the sunlight
that we receive on earth, astronomers had expected Neptune to be cold and
dormant. Instead, Voyager 2 showed Neptune to have activity much like Jupiter,
including the giant dark storm system shown here. For more info
see Neptune
Introduction, or
Neptune
View, or
Neptune
APODs.
Pluto and its companion (satellite) Charon. Pluto is the smallest of
the planets and has been considered for demotion to a minor solar system body.
It is also the planet with the most eccentric orbit which lies at an angle to
the rest of the ecliptic. From about 1979 to 1999 Pluto was within Neptune's
orbit, making Neptune temporarily the most distant planet from the sunFor more
info see Pluto
Introduction or
Pluto View.
Continuing our journey outward for nearly one year
we come to the
Oort Cloud which may contain as many as a trillion
comets.
Comets are of particular interest to astronomers because they may be the mos
primitive objects in the solar system, revealing much about the conditions
when our Solar System formed. Recent comets include
Comet
Hale-Bopp Bright ice/rock nucleus,yellow dust tail and faint blue gas
tail. Comet
Halley A short-period comet, Halley passes near the Earth every 76 years.
First mentioned in the historical record in 240BCE, it can also be seen in the
Bayeux Tapestry which
commemorates the Battle of Hastings in 1066 (look in the upper right hand
corner). Named after Edmund Halley who calculated
its orbit in 1705 and predicted the date of its next appearance.
APODs of
Comet Hale-Bopp.
Looking back at the
Sun, our star - 8 light-minutes = 1.5x1013
cm = 150 million km = 93 million miles from Earth. The Sun is a very
middle class star, unique only becuse of its
proximity to Earth.
The next nearest star is
Alpha Centauri,
a triple-star system visible from the southern
hemisphere, four light-years away.
As a measure of how empty space is, consider a model in which the Sun is
represented by a large grapefruit; the Earth would be the size of a fancy
pinhead ten paces away and the next grapefruit (Alpha Cen) would be in
Cleveland! (n.b. a light year is a distance not a time.
One light-year (l.y.) is the distance that light waves travel in a year =
1.0 x 1018cm, about 6 trillion miles.)
Before we get too cavalier about zipping around the Solar System at
light speed lets remember how far beyond our current capabilities
this is:
The
Voyager
Spacecraft, the most sophisticared space missions yet attempted by humans
took years to get to Jupiter & Saturn. As of 1999 May, Voyager 1 was
nearly 6 billion miles from earth; it takes over 20 hours to send a signal
and receive a reply. See where
Voyager is now. *The Voyager Spacecraft are not headed
toward Cen, by the way.
The Pleiades Star
Cluster, The
Seven
Sisters of Greek Mythology (Suburu to the
Japanese) 400 l.y. away, is a relatively young cluster of hundreds of stars
with an age of about 75 million years. Most stars form in clusters like the
Pleiades.
The Orion Nebula -
1500 light years, visible as the second "star" in Orion's sword. This gaseous
nebula contains a younger cluster of stars (age ~ 1 million years). The hot
young stars in the Trapezium near the center are ionizing and heating the
surrounding gas, causing it to fluoresce. Compare the above with a much
longer exposure of
Orion,
showing the faint outer regions. The nebula sits on one edge of a cold,
relatively dense molecular cloud, wher star formation is occurring actively.
The Crab Nebula, about 6000 l.y. away in the direction of Taurus,
is the remnant of a massive star that ended its life in
a gigantic supernova explosion in July 1054. The glowing gas in the picture
is the "star stuff" enriched in heavier elements (C,O,S, etc) produced in the
nuclear fusion furnace at the star's core. At the center of the Crab Nebula
is a pulasr --- a rapidly rotating, highly magnetized neutron star. The
supernova was noted by Chinese astronomers and is also commemorated in
Asasazi
Petroglyphs in Chaco Canyon and other southwestern Native American sites.
Curiously there is no mention in European records. Another look at the Crab
from the Web
Nebulae.
The Veil Nebula
part of the Cygnus
Loop, remnant of a supernova that occurred about 15--20
thousand years ago. As the explosive shock wave moves outward from the dead
star, it plows up material from the interstellar medium, causing it to glow.
The gas in the center is heated to temperatures of millions of degrees and is
a strong source of
x-rays.
The Ring
Nebula , about 5000 l.y. in the constellation Lyra, is the final death
"hiccup" of a star like our Sun. The outer layers of the star are ejected
as it runs out of nuclear fuel and the hot inner core causes the ejected gas
to fluoresce. This final stage is called a Planetary Nebula, though it
has nothing to do with planets. At the center of the planetary nebula is the
small (R~Rearth) intensely hot (T~100,000K) cinder of the dying
star - a white dwarf.
Globular Cluster
-- Globular clusters are gravitationally bound clusters of millions of stars,
formed in the very early history of our galaxy, 10--15 billion years ago.
There are about 250 globular
clusters distributed roughly spherically
around the Milky Way. Take a
tour of the Milky Way's globular clusters. Some other galaxies
have many thousands of globular clusters.
Our Milky Way
galaxy is a system of nearly a half a trillion stars. It is about 100,000 l.y.
across. The Sun is about 2/3 of the way toward the outer part of the galaxy
disk.
The Large Magellanic
Cloud with
The Small Magellanic Cloud
satellite galaxies to the Milky Way, about 150,000 l.y. away in the southern
skies. The Magellanic clouds were first described to Europeans by the crew of
Magellan's ships as the rounded the tip of Cape Horn.
Part of the collection of galaxies known as the "Local Group".
The Andromeda Galaxy
- 2 million light years. This galaxy and our Milky Way make up the dominant
galaxies of our local cluster, "The Local Group". The Andromeda Galaxy, also
known as Messier 31, is somewhat more massive than the Milky Way, but
otherwise structurally similar.
Spiral Galaxy
Messier 33 (M33) Another member of the Local Group of galaxies. With
the Milky Way and Andromeda,
the only three spiral galaxies in the Local Group.
The Local Group of Galaxies is our own small cluster of about 30 galaxies,
dominated by the Milky Way and Andromeda. For
more info .
M51 The Whirlpool
Galaxy, located about 15 million light-years from Earth, is undergoing a
tidal interaction with its companion SB galaxy. The beautiful spiral
structure in M51 may be due to this gravitational interaction.
The Virgo Cluster
of Galaxies (left) is the closest galaxy cluster to the Milky Way, about
50 million l.y. away, Virgo contains several hundred galaxies. Out local
group is an outlying satellite of the Virgo Cluster
The Hercules
Cluster of galaxies (right) 650 million light-years from Earth is unusual
in the number of spiral galaxies that it contains.
Quasar
3C273 -- Quasars are the most luminous objects in the universe,
visible to distances of billions of light years. They are believed to be
powered a massive central black hole, perhaps 100 million to a billion times
the mass of the Sun, that generates energy by accreting nearby matter.
3C 273 was one of the first quasars discovered; with a redshift that
corresponds to 15% of the speed of light , z = 15%, it is about two billion
l.y. away. It is orders of magnitude brighter than the
faint galaxies in a small group aroung the quasar, just visible in this
photograph.
Gravitational
Lens A very massive object, such as this cluster of galaxies, can act as
a gravitational lens. Light passing through the cluster from an object located
behind it can be focused and amplified to produce one or more images of the
background object. The four bright spots in the forground are lensed images
of a spiral galaxy lying behind the cluster.
The Hubble Deep Field, the
deepest space photograph taken to date shows galaxies billions of light years
away, as they were when the Universe was only a fraction of its current age,
believed to be 10--20 billion years.
History
Scale of the Universe
Physics 7 Lectures
Physics 7 Home
Loki Volcano on Io
Voyager at Neptune
Comet Hale-Bopp
(Mach 2) 1350 mph 33 yrs
66 yrs 2 million yrs
(Voyager) 40,000 mph 1.5 yrs
3 yrs 70,000* yrs
The Milky Way in the Infrared
Conducted by Gene Smith, CASS/UCSD.
Comments?
You may send email to hsmith@ucsd.edu
Prof. H. E. (Gene) Smith
CASS 0424 UCSD
9500 Gilman Drive
La Jolla, CA 92093-0424
Last updated: 12 January 2001