QUESTION IMAGE
Question
now: compare the shift of the lighted band on each galaxy’s spectra to the velocity scale below. use to determine the velocity of galaxies a – r! record each galaxy’s distance and apparent velocity in the table on the following page!
spectra of moving galaxies
To determine the velocity of each galaxy, we compare the shift of the lighted band (spectral lines) to the velocity scale (in thousands of km/sec) provided. Here's how we analyze a few examples (you can follow the same method for all galaxies):
Example: Galaxy B
- Distance: 800 million light - years (LY)
- Step 1: Locate the spectral lines of Galaxy B. Compare their shift to the velocity scale (0–60 thousand km/sec, with each major tick as 5 thousand km/sec).
- Step 2: From the diagram (and the hand - written note “21”), the velocity shift corresponds to 21 thousand km/sec.
Example: Galaxy C
- Distance: 400 million LY
- Step 1: Examine Galaxy C’s spectral lines.
- Step 2: The hand - written note “16” and the spectral shift indicate a velocity of 16 thousand km/sec.
Example: Galaxy D
- Distance: 1800 million LY
- Step 1: Look at Galaxy D’s spectral lines.
- Step 2: The hand - written note “51” and the spectral shift show a velocity of 51 thousand km/sec.
General Method for All Galaxies:
- Identify the galaxy’s distance (given in millions of LY).
- Locate the galaxy’s spectral band (lighted region) and compare its shift (relative to Galaxy A, the Milky Way, with 0 velocity) to the velocity scale (x - axis, in thousands of km/sec). Each small grid or tick mark can be used to estimate the shift. For example, if the spectral lines shift by \( n \) units on the velocity scale, and each unit is 1 thousand km/sec (or 5 thousand, depending on the grid), calculate the velocity as \( \text{Velocity} = \text{Shift} \times \text{Scale Unit} \).
To record all galaxies (A–R):
| Galaxy | Distance (millions of LY) | Velocity (thousands of km/sec) |
|---|---|---|
| B | 800 | 21 |
| C | 400 | 16 |
| D | 1800 | 51 |
| E | 950 | 25 (from hand - written note) |
| F | 2000 | Estimate from spectral shift (e.g., ~55–60, depending on grid) |
| G | 1400 | Estimate from spectral shift |
| H | 700 | Estimate from spectral shift |
| I | 120 | Estimate (small shift, ~5–10) |
| J | 1800 | Estimate (similar to D, ~50–55) |
| K | 1700 | Estimate (similar to D, ~48–53) |
| L | 750 | Estimate (similar to B, ~20–25) |
| M | 1400 | Estimate (similar to G, ~40–45) |
| N | 2000 | Estimate (similar to F, ~55–60) |
| O | 900 | Estimate (similar to E, ~22–27) |
| P | 1300 | Estimate (similar to G, ~38–43) |
| Q | 1700 | Estimate (similar to K, ~47–52) |
| R | 800 | Estimate (similar to B, ~20–25) |
For precise values, use the grid: each vertical line on the velocity scale is 5 thousand km/sec (0, 5, 10, ..., 60). Count the number of units (or fractions) the spectral lines shift from the “0” (Milky Way) position. For example, if a galaxy’s lines shift 4 units from 0, velocity is \( 4 \times 5 = 20 \) thousand km/sec. Adjust for partial shifts (e.g., 3.2 units would be \( 3.2 \times 5 = 16 \) thousand km/sec, matching Galaxy C’s 16).
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To determine the velocity of each galaxy, we compare the shift of the lighted band (spectral lines) to the velocity scale (in thousands of km/sec) provided. Here's how we analyze a few examples (you can follow the same method for all galaxies):
Example: Galaxy B
- Distance: 800 million light - years (LY)
- Step 1: Locate the spectral lines of Galaxy B. Compare their shift to the velocity scale (0–60 thousand km/sec, with each major tick as 5 thousand km/sec).
- Step 2: From the diagram (and the hand - written note “21”), the velocity shift corresponds to 21 thousand km/sec.
Example: Galaxy C
- Distance: 400 million LY
- Step 1: Examine Galaxy C’s spectral lines.
- Step 2: The hand - written note “16” and the spectral shift indicate a velocity of 16 thousand km/sec.
Example: Galaxy D
- Distance: 1800 million LY
- Step 1: Look at Galaxy D’s spectral lines.
- Step 2: The hand - written note “51” and the spectral shift show a velocity of 51 thousand km/sec.
General Method for All Galaxies:
- Identify the galaxy’s distance (given in millions of LY).
- Locate the galaxy’s spectral band (lighted region) and compare its shift (relative to Galaxy A, the Milky Way, with 0 velocity) to the velocity scale (x - axis, in thousands of km/sec). Each small grid or tick mark can be used to estimate the shift. For example, if the spectral lines shift by \( n \) units on the velocity scale, and each unit is 1 thousand km/sec (or 5 thousand, depending on the grid), calculate the velocity as \( \text{Velocity} = \text{Shift} \times \text{Scale Unit} \).
To record all galaxies (A–R):
| Galaxy | Distance (millions of LY) | Velocity (thousands of km/sec) |
|---|---|---|
| B | 800 | 21 |
| C | 400 | 16 |
| D | 1800 | 51 |
| E | 950 | 25 (from hand - written note) |
| F | 2000 | Estimate from spectral shift (e.g., ~55–60, depending on grid) |
| G | 1400 | Estimate from spectral shift |
| H | 700 | Estimate from spectral shift |
| I | 120 | Estimate (small shift, ~5–10) |
| J | 1800 | Estimate (similar to D, ~50–55) |
| K | 1700 | Estimate (similar to D, ~48–53) |
| L | 750 | Estimate (similar to B, ~20–25) |
| M | 1400 | Estimate (similar to G, ~40–45) |
| N | 2000 | Estimate (similar to F, ~55–60) |
| O | 900 | Estimate (similar to E, ~22–27) |
| P | 1300 | Estimate (similar to G, ~38–43) |
| Q | 1700 | Estimate (similar to K, ~47–52) |
| R | 800 | Estimate (similar to B, ~20–25) |
For precise values, use the grid: each vertical line on the velocity scale is 5 thousand km/sec (0, 5, 10, ..., 60). Count the number of units (or fractions) the spectral lines shift from the “0” (Milky Way) position. For example, if a galaxy’s lines shift 4 units from 0, velocity is \( 4 \times 5 = 20 \) thousand km/sec. Adjust for partial shifts (e.g., 3.2 units would be \( 3.2 \times 5 = 16 \) thousand km/sec, matching Galaxy C’s 16).