tour of radio astronomy related stuff

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A Tour of the Radio Universe This composite picture shows the radio sky above an old optical photograph of the NRAO site in Green Bank, WV. The former 300 Foot Telescope (the large dish standing between the three 85 foot interferometer telescopes on the left and the 140 Foot Telescope on the right) made this 4.85 GHz radio image, which is about 45 degrees across. Increasing radio brightness is indicated by lighter shades to indicate how the sky would app ear to s omeone with a "r adio eye" 300 feet in diameter. Image credit The visible and radio skies reveal quite different "parallel universes" sharing the same space. Most bright stars are undetectable at radio wavelengths, and most strong radio sources are o pticall y faint or in visibl e. Famil iar o bjects like the Sun and pl anets o ften loo k quite di fferent through th e radio and o ptical windows. The extended radio so urces spread al o ng a b and from the lower left to the upper right in this picture lie in the outer Milky Way. The brightest irr egul arly shaped sources are clouds of hydrogen ioni z ed by lumi nous yo ung stars. Such stars qui ckly exhaust their nu clear fuel , co ll apse, and explode as supern o vae, whose remnants appear as faint radio rings. Unlike the nearby (distances <  000  light years) stars visible to the 1 T our of the Ra d io Universe http: / / www.cv.nrao.ed u/ course/astr534/ T our.html 1 of 20 09/ 02/ 2008 02: 01 PM

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A Tour of the Radio Universe

This composite picture shows the radio sky above an old optical photograph of the NRAO site

in Green Bank, WV. The former 300 Foot Telescope (the large dish standing between the three

85 foot interferometer telescopes on the left and the 140 Foot Telescope on the right) made

this 4.85 GHz radio image, which is about 45 degrees across. Increasing radio brightness is

indicated by lighter shades to indicate how the sky would appear to someone with a "radio

eye" 300 feet in diameter. Image credit 

The visible and radio skies reveal quite different "parallel universes" sharing the same space.Most bright stars are undetectable at radio wavelengths, and most strong radio sources are

optically faint or invisible. Familiar objects like the Sun and planets often look quite different

through the radio and optical windows. The extended radio sources spread along a band from

the lower left to the upper right in this picture lie in the outer Milky Way. The brightest

irregularly shaped sources are clouds of hydrogen ionized by luminous young stars. Such stars

quickly exhaust their nuclear fuel, collapse, and explode as supernovae, whose remnants

appear as faint radio rings. Unlike the nearby (distances <   000 light years) stars visible to the1

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human eye, almost none of the myriad "radio stars" (unresolved radio sources) scattered

across the sky are actually stars. Most are extremely luminous radio galaxies or quasars, and

their average distance is over 5,000,000,000 light years. Radio waves travel at the speed of 

light, so distant extragalactic sources appear today as they actually were billions of years ago.

Radio galaxies and quasars are beacons of information about galaxies and their environs,

everywhere in the observable universe and ever since the first galaxies were formed.

The brightest discrete radio source is the Sun, but it is much less dominant than it is in visible

light. The radio sky is always dark, even when the Sun is up, because atmospheric dust

doesn't scatter radio waves, whose wavelengths are much longer than the dust particles.

The quiet Sun at · :6 GHz imaged by the VLA with a resolution of 12 arcsec, or about 8400

km on the surface of the Sun. The brightest features (red) in this false-color image have

brightness temperatures K and coincide with sunspots. The green features are cooler 

and show where the Sun's atmosphere is very dense. At this frequency the radio-emittingsurface of the Sun has an average temperature of K, and the dark blue features are

cooler yet. The blue slash crossing the bottom of the disk is a feature called a filament 

channel, where the Sun's atmosphere is very thin: it marks the boundary of the South Pole of 

the Sun on this day. The radio Sun is somewhat bigger than the optical Sun: the solar limb

(the edge of the disk) in this image is about 20000 km above the optical limb.  Image credit 

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The Moon and planets are not detectable by reflected solar radiation at radio wavelengths.

However, they all emit thermal radiation, and Jupiter is a strong nonthermal source as well. If 

the Sun were suddenly switched off, the planets would remain radio sources for a long time,

slowly fading as they cooled. At first glance, the Õ :85 mm radio image of the Moon (below)

looks familiar, but there are differences from the visible Moon.

Thermal emission from the Moon at Õ   50 Öm. Image credit 

The darker right edge of the Moon is not being illuminated by the Sun, but it still emits radio

waves because it does not cool to absolute zero during the lunar night. A subtler point is that

the radio emission is not produced at the visible surface; it emerges from a layer about ten

wavelengths thick. As a result, monthly temperature variations of the Moon decrease with

increasing wavelength. These wavelength-dependent temperature variations encode

information about the conductivity and heat capacity of the rocky and dusty outer layers of 

the Moon.

Radio observations of solar-system objects need not be passive. Radar yielded the first

measurement of the rotation period of Venus by penetrating its optically opaque atmosphere,

measured a more accurate value for the astronomical unit  (the distance between the Earth

and the Sun), imaged the topography of the solid planets and moons, measured their rotation

periods, and tracked asteroids and comets. Radar images like the one below were recently

used to search for water ice trapped in cold craters near the lunar poles. For an introduction

to radar astronomy, see the Arecibo radar web page.

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This Arecibo/GBT Õ   0 cm bistatic radar image of the lunar pole did not find any water ice

within a few meters of the lunar surface, even in cold polar craters. Image credit 

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This radar image of Venus has a resolution of about 3 km. A mosaic of the Magellan satellite

radar images forms the image base. Gaps in the Magellan coverage were filled with images

from the Earth-based Arecibo radar and with a neutral tone elsewhere (primarily near the

south pole). The composite image was processed to improve contrast and to emphasize small features, and it was color-coded to represent elevation. Image credit 

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This VLA image of Jupiter doesn't look like a planetary disk at all. Most of the radio emission

is synchrotron radiation from electrons in Jupiter's magnetic field. Image credit 

The cosmic static discovered by Karl Jansky is dominated by diffuse emission orginating in and

near the disk of our Galaxy. The distribution of 408 MHz continuum emission shown below in

Galactic coordinates is expected since we are located in the disk of a galaxy similar to the

edge-on galaxy NGC 4565 shown below.

This all-sky 408 MHz continuum image (Haslam et al. 1982, A&AS, 47, 1) is shown in Galactic 

coordinates, with the galactic center in the middle and the galactic disk extending horizontally 

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from it.

The edge-on galaxy NGC 4565. We are located in the disk of a galaxy like this one. Image

credit 

Interstellar gas in our Galaxy emits spectral lines as well as continuum noise. Neutral hydrogen

(HI) gas is ubiquitous in the disk. The brightness of the cm hyperfine line at

MHz is proportional to the column density of HI along the line of sight and is nearly independentof the gas temperature. It is not affected by dust absorption, so we can see the HI

everywhere in our Galaxy and in nearby external galaxies.

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Red indicates directions of high hydrogen density, while blue and black show areas with little

hydrogen. The figure is centered on the Galactic center and Galactic longitude increases to the

left. Some of the hydrogen loops outline old supernova remnants.

Image credit 

The 21 cm HI line traces cold hydrogen tidally torn from the galaxies in the M81 group. Image

credit 

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This false-color image of CO (J = 2-1) emission from the face-on spiral galaxy M51 wasmade with the Smithsonian Submillimeter Array (SMA). It reveals regions containing dense

molecular gas, dust, and star formation that are optically obscured. Image credit 

Some of the diffuse continuum emission from our Galaxy can be resolved into discrete

sources.

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Cassiopeia A (Cas A) is the remnant of a supernova explosion that occured over 300 years

ago in our Galaxy, at a distance of about 11,000 light years from us. Its name is derived from

the constellation in which it is seen: Cassiopeia, the Queen. A radio supernova is the explosion

that occurs at the end of a massive star's life, and Cas A is the expanding shell of material 

that remains from such an explosion. This image was made by the VLA at three different 

frequencies: 1.4, 5.0, and 8.4 GHz. The material that was ejected from the supernova

explosion can be seen in this image as bright filaments. Image credit 

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This multiwavelength composite image of the Crab Nebula shows its X-ray (blue), optical 

(green), and radio (red) emission. The pulsar is the bright point source at the center. Image

credit 

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M80 is a dense globular cluster of several hundred thousand stars, most of which are very 

old. The density of stars in such globular clusters is so high that stellar collisions are

common. Globular clusters "recycle" old pulsars to produce new pulsars with millisecond 

 periods. Image credit 

Supernova remnants and the relativistic electrons accelerated in them account for about 90%

of the GHz continuum emission from our Galaxy. Most of the remaining continuum

emission at 1 GHz is thermal emission from HII regions, hydrogen clouds ionized by UV

radiation from extremely massive stars.

The nearest large HII region is the Orion Nebula.

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The Orion Nebula is a picture book of star formation, from the massive, young stars that are

shaping the nebula to the pillars of dense gas that may be the homes of budding stars. The

bright central region is the home of the four heftiest stars in the nebula. The stars are called 

the Trapezium because they are arranged in a trapezoid pattern. Ultraviolet light unleashed by 

these stars is carving a cavity in the nebula and disrupting the growth of hundreds of smaller stars. Located near the Trapezium stars are stars still young enough to have disks of material 

encircling them. These disks are called protoplanetary disks or "proplyds" and are too small to

see clearly in this image. The disks are the building blocks of solar systems.

The bright glow at upper left is from M43, a small region being shaped by a massive, young

star's ultraviolet light. Astronomers call the region a miniature Orion Nebula because only one

star is sculpting the landscape. The Orion Nebula has four such stars. Next to M43 are dense,

dark pillars of dust and gas that point toward the Trapezium. These pillars are resisting erosion

from the Trapezium's intense ultraviolet light. The glowing region on the right reveals arcs and 

bubbles formed when stellar winds—streams of charged particles ejected from the Trapezium

stars—collide with material.

The faint red stars near the bottom are the myriad brown dwarfs that Hubble spied for the

first time in the nebula in visible light. Sometimes called "failed stars," brown dwarfs are cool 

objects that are too small to be ordinary stars because they cannot sustain nuclear fusion in

their cores the way our Sun does. The dark red column, below, left, shows an illuminated edge

of the cavity wall. Image credit 

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Orion's radio continuum is free-free thermal emission from the hot ionized hydrogen. The

dusty nebula is transparent at high radio frequencies, so all of the ionized hydrogen contributes

to the image below.

Thermal emission from the Orion nebula. Image credit 

Thus massive, short-lived stars are responsible for nearly all of the radio continuum from our

Galaxy.

The radio luminosities of most spiral galaxies are proportional to their recent star-formation

rates. The nearby "starburst" galaxy M82 has a star-formation rate about ten times that of 

our Galaxy and is a correspondingly brighter radio source. Most galaxies with little or no recent

star formation (e.g., elliptical galaxies) are radio quiet.

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This mosaic image is the sharpest wide-angle view ever obtained of M82. The galaxy is

remarkable for its bright blue disk, webs of shredded clouds, and fiery-looking plumes of 

glowing hydrogen blasting out of its central regions. Throughout the galaxy's center, young

stars are being born 10 times faster than they are inside our entire Milky Way Galaxy. The

resulting huge concentration of young stars carved into the gas and dust at the galaxy's

center. The fierce galactic superwind generated from these stars compresses enough gas to

make millions of more stars. In M82, young stars are crammed into tiny but massive star clusters. These, in turn, congregate by the dozens to make the bright patches, or "starburst 

clumps," in the central parts of M82. The clusters in the clumps can only be distinguished in

the sharp Hubble images. Most of the pale, white objects sprinkled around the body of M82

that look like fuzzy stars are actually individual star clusters about 20 light-years across and 

contain up to a million stars. The rapid rate of star formation in this galaxy eventually will be

self-limiting. When star formation becomes too vigorous, it will consume or destroy the

material needed to make more stars. The starburst then will subside, probably in a few tens of 

millions of years. Image credit 

Star-forming galaxies are very common, but their radio sources are not especially luminous, so

they account for less than 1% of the strongest extragalactic radio sources and somewhat lessthan half of the cosmic radio-source background.

The strongest extragalactic radio source in the sky is the radio galaxy Cygnus A. The 1954

identification of this source with an extremely distant (redshift , corresponding to a

distance Mpc and a lookback time of about 700 million years) galaxy stunned radio

astronomers, who immediately recognized that such a luminous radio source (total radio

luminosity erg s W) could be detected almost anywhere in the universe. The

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angular extent of this source, about 100 arcsec, implies a linear extent of about 100 kpc,

which is much larger than the host galaxy of stars. The energy source is clearly not stars.

Gravitational energy released by matter accreting onto a supermassive ( ) black

hole in the center of the host galaxy powers this and other luminous extragalactic radio

sources.

 A high-resolution VLA image of the radio source Cygnus A. The bright central component is

thought to coincide with a supermassive black hole that accelerates the relativistic electrons

along two jets terminating in lobes well outside the host galaxy. Image credit 

The bright radio source 3C 273 was identified with the first quasar at an even higher redshift,

. Such quasars appear to be radio galaxies in an especially active state, when visible

light from the region near the black hole overwhelms the starlight from the host galaxy and

makes the quasar look like a bright star.

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This HST gray-scale image of the quasar 3C 273 includes radio contours superimposed on the

optical jet emission. Image credit 

Some exotic phenomena are radio sources but were discovered in other wavelength ranges.

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are briefly the most luminous (up to 10  erg s ) discrete sources

in the universe, so bright that they were discovered in the 1960s by the VELA nuclear-test

monitoring satellites. (For a good history, see the NASA/Swift GRB page). Their faint radio

afterglows have proven very useful in constraining the energetics and parent populations of 

GRBs.

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 Artist's conception of a gamma-ray burst. Radio observations made with the Very Large

 Array, as well as the Australia Telescope Compact Array and the Ryle Telescope, have been

combined with optical and X-ray data to show that this cosmic explosion had a nested jet 

structure as shown here. The thin core of the jet produced weak gamma-rays while the thicker 

envelope produced copious radio waves. This information reveals that different types of 

cosmic explosions (gamma-ray bursts, X-ray flashes, and some types of supernovae) havethe same amount of total energy and therefore share a common origin. Image credit 

The final stop on any tour of the radio universe is the cosmic microwave background radiation

(CMBR), which is thermal radiation from the hot big bang. It fills the universe and is the

energetically dominant component of all electromagnetic radiation. We see the surface of last

scattering beyond which the universe was ionized and opaque. No radio sources, even if any

exist, could be seen beyond this point. The surface of last scattering is at redshift , so

the photons we see today were emitted when the universe was only about years old.

The CMBR is very nearly isotropic and very nearly a perfect blackbody with K.

The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) satellite, in orbit near the L2 Lagrange

point, has made all-sky images of the tiny fluctuations in CMBR brightness.

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The WMAP spacecraft near L2 beyond the Moon. Image credit 

Small fluctuations in the brightness of the CMBR, greatly accentuated in this false-color image.

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Image credit  

The angular power spectrum of CMBR brightness fluctuations. Image credit 

The angular power spectrum of these fluctuations constrains a host of fundamental

cosmological parameters. See the WMAP web site http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/ for the latest

results.

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