We are IntechOpen,
the world’s leading publisher of
Open Access books
Built by scientists, for scientists
6,200
Open access books available
169,000
International authors and editors
185M
Downloads
Our authors are among the
154
Countries delivered to
TOP 1%
most cited scientists
12.2%
Contributors from top 500 universities
Selection of our books indexed in the Book Citation Index
in Web of Science™ Core Collection (BKCI)
Interested in publishing with us?
Contact
[email protected] Numbers displayed above are based on latest data collected.
For more information visit www.intechopen.com
Chapter
Introduction Chapter: Astronomy
Yann-Henri Chemin
1. Introduction
The observation of the Sun, the solar system, and the vast regions laying outside
are commonly called astronomy.
In the whole range of observations of our neighborhood (Figure 1), we study the
Sun, the Moon, the rocky planets, and the gas giants. In the last decades, the space
probes sent around the solar system have enhanced our exploration capacity, that is,
to go from hazy photographs to high-resolution mapping of most of our planetary
bodies, even of their moons. Additionally, dwarf planets (Ceres and Vesta) and
asteroids have been visited and mapped. This, in itself, it is a unique civilizational
achievement in terms of exploration.
In between Mars and Jupiter, the asteroid belt is found. Further and mostly after
Neptune’s orbit is the Kuiper belt. Eventually, the very possible Oort cloud, a reservoir
of visiting comets, is vastly beyond the orbit of (90377) Sedna (Figure 1).
Our solar system is located in between two arms of a spiral galaxy, within what is
often called a “finger” named the Orion spur (Figure 2). The center of our galaxy, the
Milky Way, is the seat of a supermassive black hole (SMBH) called Sagittarius A* [3].
Figure 1.
Extracted from ref. [1], this is the solar system. The upper left is defined by Jupiter’s orbit, upper right reaches
Pluto’s orbit, the Kuiper belt, and the perigee of (90377) Sedna. Bottom right is the orbit of (90377) Sedna, which
is barely seen in the bottom left alongside the inner Oort cloud, which is thought to be the source of comets. Image
credit: NASA/CalTech.
1
Astronomy and Planetary Science - From Cryovolcanism to Black Holes and Galactic Evolution
Figure 2.
The Milky Way. Extracted from ref. [2], image credit: NASA/Adler/U. Chicago/Wesleyan/JPL-Caltech.
Figure 3.
Extracted from ref. [4], the local void, visualization centered on our galaxy, the milky way.
Our galaxy is located on a fringe of what could be called mycelium filaments. In
other words, detectable matter at the cosmological level, tends to agglomerate in
threads, interconnected by groups of larger material aggregations, not unlike the
spread of fungal mycelium in Earth’s soil, punctuated by the presence of “nodes,”
from which mycelium filaments extend. Of particular importance to our galaxy
“suburb” is a large area void of matter (Figure 3). The Local Void has been mapped
synthetically with a great resolution recently [4].
The overall observable universe is a sphere, centered on the location of the one
observing. For us, it is planet Earth. When mapped, this sphere, so far, extends
outwards in a radius of 46.5 billion light-years (440 Ym), as a comoving distance. The
2
Introduction Chapter: Astronomy
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.108133
Figure 4.
Extracted from ref. [6], scanning from the dark energy spectroscopic instrument (DESI), from the center, earth,
toward the further seen so far, about one billion years after the big bang.
sloan digital sky survey (SDSS), mapping of the observable universe [5], was done not
by direct distance, but in signed velocity from the observation point, deducting
mostly from the red-shifting of the observations. The faster the positive red-shifting
velocity, the further away the colocation to the observer (Figure 4).
2. Observing the sun and the stars
The closest of the stars, the Sun, is a G-IV, main-sequence star, and is located in the
center of the Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagram [7] classification (Figure 5). Its next
evolutions would be to leave the main sequence, that is the oblique line crossing
Figure 5 toward the upper right. It is then going to inflate and shift to become eventu-
ally a red giant, moving further up in the upper right arm of the HR diagram. Once reach
maximum inflation, a cascade of gravitational collapses will happen, ejecting material by
major explosions. Gravity will compact the remaining into a white dwarf, a neutron star,
in the midst of its ejecta, witnessed as a (super) nova remnant, a nebula. The transition
from the super-giant, the (super) nova reducing into the remaining white dwarf, will
take the star rapidly across the HR diagram, from the upper right to the mid-upper left,
and crossing down in the visible arc in the bottom left side of Figure 5.
The central part of the Sun is composed of a core (a fourth of its radius) where
thermonuclear reactions generate energy. It has an average density ten times that of
lead, and a temperature of 15 10 K. The radiative zone of the Sun is about one-third of
the Sun’s radius. Both transfer energy by radiative forces of photons. The pathways
undergo a random walk and act as an apparent solid body [8].
The photosphere is 300–500 Km deep, and the light is emitted from there before
the plasma becomes opaque. This is also the layer that defines the effective tempera-
ture of the Sun, about 5.8 10 K, plasma convection is visible there under the form of
granules of sizes measured in Mm (10 m).
3
Astronomy and Planetary Science - From Cryovolcanism to Black Holes and Galactic Evolution
Figure 5.
HR diagram, classification of stars evolution. Image credits: Wikimedia.
Figure 6.
High-resolution image of the sun from solar orbiter, showing magnetically bound plasma. Credit: ESA & NASA/
solar orbiter/EUI team; data processing: E. Kraaikamp (ROB). [9].
The Sun’s “atmosphere” (starting from Figure 6) is composed of the chromo-
sphere and the corona (in that order). The chromosphere is 2000 Km deep and is the
Sun’s eclipse “red ring of fire.” It has a steep drop in material density, and an initial
temperature drop from 5.8 103 K to 3.5 103 K to eventually reach 35 103 K.
4
Introduction Chapter: Astronomy
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.108133
The corona is a very large volume above the chromosphere, vastly warmer too,
made of ionized plasma of about 1106 K, with a majority of emission coming from Fe-
XIV and Fe-X. It is the origin of the solar winds. Some areas with open magnetic fields
yield faster solar winds (about 0.7 106 m/s).
We remotely sense the Sun (Solar Orbiter imagery in Figure 6), by analyzing
electromagnetic spectra emitted from its activity. Thermodynamics and hydrody-
namics applied to plasma with magnetic fields are all needed to study the radiative,
convective, and exo-atmospheric conditions of the Sun energy transport.
More generally, stellar objects of different characteristics have long been observed
and many physical theories have been developed relating observations and life cycles,
that is, HR diagram in Figure 5 and equations of stellar structure, respectively. Stellar
oscillations [10], spherical harmonics, and resonance patterns analysis belong to geo-
physics and are now in common use to study and classify stars.
3. Observing the galaxies and the universe
In a similar way to stars, galaxies are also categorized along their paths of evolu-
tion. Hubble classification of galaxies evolution, the Hubble Sequence (Figure 7),
reviewed here [11] (initial article [12]), provides an observation-based classification
of galaxies.
The Elliptical galaxies start at spherical (E0; e = 0) to the most common type of
elliptical galaxies (E7; e = 0.7). As the galaxy tends to age, central spin tends to send
matter away in form of spiral arms.
The second level of classification in the Hubble Sequence (and further modifica-
tions) is dedicated to the extension and the shape of the Spiral arms of the galaxies. As
seen in Figure 7, two branches of evolution differ in shapes of both the central bulge
(whether it keeps spheroid or is barred) and the type of arms evolution. The first type,
with spheroid central bulge is classified as Sa, Sb, and Sc along the evolution path.
Similarly, Barred spiral galaxies are SBa, SBb, and SBc.
Sa (SBa) central bulge is bright and prominent.
Arms are tightly wound and smooth.
Sb (SBb) central bulge is less bright.
Figure 7.
Hubble classification of galaxies evolution, the Hubble sequence. Courtesy: Wikipedia.
5
Astronomy and Planetary Science - From Cryovolcanism to Black Holes and Galactic Evolution
Arms are less tight than above.
Sc (SBc) central bulge is smaller and fainter.
Arms are loosely wound (stellar clusters and nebulae).
Sd (SBd) central bulge is dim.
Arms are bright and very loose, possible fragmentary arms.
The central bulge of our galaxy, the Milky Way, is dominated by a super massive
black hole (SMBH), Sagittarius A* [13]. Sgr A*‘s event horizon image is seen in
Figure 8. It has an estimated mass of 4.152 106 M⊙ and is the prime of several stars,
their orbits helping define its mass. Its observed diameter is 51.8 106 Km, slightly more
than the Sun-Mercury maximum distance (⊙ ☿ = 46 106 Km at ⊙ perihelion), which
is about 1/3 AU (the mean distance ⊙ ⊕).
Looking outside of the solar system has been largely enhanced with space tele-
scopes. Furthering the capacity of the Hubble space telescope, in 2022, the James
Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was activated at Lagrange 2, including the near-
infrared spectrograph (NIRSpec) [14]. Its first images have been no less than revolu-
tionary, giving direct observations of exoplanets and their atmosphere, but also
looking further into the past of the universe.
The decades ahead of us promise the enhancement of our understanding of Sun,
planets, the stars, black holes, and all other astronomical objects in our universe
available to be observed. The observable universe itself just got smaller with JWST
activated, and our understanding of the universe and its temporal unraveling is also
furthering with every new data gathered. Time itself may also be better understood
eventually, who knows?
Figure 8.
The event horizon of the SMBH Sgr a* at the center of the milky way [13].
6
Introduction Chapter: Astronomy
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.108133
Abbreviations
⊙ Sun
☿ planet Mercury
⊕ planet Earth
AU astronomical unit (150 106 Km)
DESI dark energy spectroscopic instrument
HR Hertzsprung-Russell
JWST James Webb Space Telescope
NASA US National Aeronautical and Space Administration
SDSS sloan digital sky survey
SMBH super massive black hole
Author details
Yann-Henri Chemin
European Commission, Joint Research Center, Ispra, Italy
© 2022 The Author(s). Licensee IntechOpen. This chapter is distributed under the terms of
the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided
the original work is properly cited.
7
Astronomy and Planetary Science - From Cryovolcanism to Black Holes and Galactic Evolution
References
[1] Chandler CO. Chasing Tails: Active news/2022-03-sun-solar-orbiter.html
Asteroid, Centaur, and Quasi-Hilda [Accessed: March 25, 2022]
Discovery with Astroinformatics and
Citizen Science [Thesis]. Flagstaff: [10] Chaplin WJ, Kjeldsen H,
Northern Arizona University; 2022 Christensen-Dalsgaard J, Basu S,
Miglio A, Appourchaux T, et al.
[2] NASA. Milky Way and Our Location Ensemble Asteroseismology of solar-
[Internet]. 2017. Available from: https:// type stars with the NASA Kepler
www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sunearth/ Mission. Science. 2011;332(6026):
news/gallery/galaxy-location.html 213-216
[Accessed: September 4, 2022]
[11] Sandage A. The Classification of
[3] Bower GC. Focus on first Sgr a* Galaxies: Early History and on-Going
results from the event horizon telescope. Developments. Annual Review of
ApJL. 2022;230(2):L12-L21 Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2005;43:
581-624
[4] Tully RB, Pomarède D, Graziani R,
Courtois HM, Hoffman Y, Shaya EJ. [12] Hubble E-P. Extragalactic nebulae.
Cosmicflows-3: Cosmography of the APJ. 1926;64:321-369
local void. The Astrophysical Journal.
2019;880(1):24. DOI: 10.3847/ [13] Event Horizon Telescope
1538-4357/ab2597 Collaboration and 270 colleagues. First
Sagittarius a* event horizon telescope
[5] Gott JR III, Jurić M, Schlegel D, results. III. Imaging of the galactic center
Hoyle F, Vogeley M, Tegmark M, et al. A supermassive black hole. The
map of the universe. ApJ. 2005;624(2): Astrophysical Journal. 2022;930:L14.
463-484. DOI: 10.1086/428890 DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ac6429
[6] Becker A. Dark Energy Spectroscopic [14] Böker T, Muzerolle J, Bacinski J,
Instrument (DESI) Creates Largest 3D Alves de Oliveira C, Birkmann S,
Map of the Cosmos. Vol. 510. Berkeley, Ferruit P, et al. In-orbit commissioning
US: Berkerly Lab; 2022. pp. 424-2436 of the NIRSpec instrument on the James
Webb space telescope. In: MacEwen HA,
[7] Hertzsprung E. On the Use of Fazio GG, Lystrup M, Batalha N,
Photographic Effective Wavelengths for Siegler N, Tong EC, editors. Space
the Determination of Color Equivalents. Telescopes and Instrumentation 2016:
Vol. 1.22(63). Postdam, DE: Publications Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave.
of the Astrophysical Observatory in Vol. 9904. Edinburgh, UK: SPIE; 2016.
Potsdam; 1911 p. 44. DOI: 10.1117/12.2231895
[8] Howe R. Dynamic variations at the
base of the solar convection zone.
Science. 2000;287(5462):2456-2460.
DOI: 10.1126/science.287.5462.2456
[9] Phys.org. Zooming into the sun with
Solar Orbiter by European Space Agency.
2022. Available from: https://phys.org/
8