Hello everybody and welcome to yet another hour of Galaxies and Cosmology and
before I start with the lecture slight changes in the schedule in the sense
that for tomorrow we had planned a normal exercise session, but the exercise that I
had planned to do there is one that we can only do a tad bit later. And it makes more
sense anyway to also already talk about proposals and the proposal exercise tomorrow. So what
we'll be doing tomorrow is talk about how to write proposals. Given that last Tuesday
you had talk about paper writing, it makes sense to put this in one block. This will
be done by Tommy Dauzer. It should take about an hour plus something. Next week there is
no lecture scheduled, so the next real lecture, not the exercise, will be Monday two weeks
from now. Okay?
So last Monday we were talking about molecules in the Milky Way and other spiral galaxies
and we came to the conclusion that standard chemistry does not work for these, for the
formation of molecules because the interaction time scale between two atoms or ions in order
to produce a molecule is too small so you can't get rid of the excess energy. We found
however that if you have simple molecules, for example H2, by using the fact that if
an ion approaches a molecule, you polarize the molecule and as a result produce a temporary
dipole moment, it is possible to generate most molecules which then leads to very complex
formation schemes for molecules as this one here, which is just an excerpt from a very
complex, far more complex reaction network. The problem however for all of these was that
we cannot form the simplest of all molecules which is the H2 and the reason for this is
that two body recombination and polarization and so on is not possible for H2 just because
it has no permanent dipole moment and therefore it can't relax into a state that is stable.
And the only solution for forming this is you need some kind of a solid state surface
in which you can dump all of the excess energy. So let's diffuse this around. And so this
means what we have to do next is we have to look at the properties of the coldest part
of the universe at the properties of dust. There is a lot of evidence for the presence
of dust in lines of sight through the interstellar medium and the most important evidence there
is in the so-called depletion of heavy elements or solid state material into the solid state
of the line of sight. What I show here is a figure that has on the y-axis the logarithm
of the ratio of the abundance of certain elements with respect to hydrogen compared to solar
abundance. So this is the logarithm of the abundance of the line of sight. And this is
the logarithm of the abundance of the line of sight with respect to solar abundance.
So this is the log of N might be any element so oxygen, zinc, magnesium and so on divided
by hydrogen so that's the number ratio for this element seen along a line of sight. And
this is the sum of the properties. The assumption here is that the sun is roughly representative
in its elemental or chemical composition to that of the interstellar medium or to that
of the galaxy as a whole. That's not entirely correct but it's correct enough. On the y-axis
the properties of these elements namely what's plotted here is the temperature at which a
given element solidifies. And what you see here in this figure is for two lines of sight
that certain elements like oxygen for example along that line of sight has the same as the
solar abundance also zinc here for example. But if you look at elements out here copper,
magnesium, chromium, iron and so on you see that along this line of sight to the object
the elemental abundance is a factor 10 to a factor 100 less than what you would assume
from solar composition. Now if you look along a line of sight to a star you're only picking
up, this is measured by absorption lines, so you're only picking up absorption in gas.
So this doesn't tell you that this material isn't there. What it tells you is that these
elements are not there in the gas phase because that's what you're probing with the measurement.
Along another line of sight which is just characterized by a different Doppler velocity
you see that also things like carbon and oxygen are depleted as well. And that is true for
almost all lines of sight. So you see that elements that form solids at temperatures
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01:31:06 Min
Aufnahmedatum
2019-11-11
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2019-11-12 01:09:47
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