Seminar 2. Viewing galaxies in 2D
From Potatopedia
- Title: Viewing Galaxies in 2D
- Subtitle: Spatially-resolved kinematics and stellar populations with IFS
Spectroscopy
We have incoming light which passes through a slit and then a grating and splits it in different wavelengths. Then the detector detects the continuous electromagnetic spectrum.
- But if we put a cold glass before the slit, we will have an absorption spectrum.
- If we put a cold glass before the slit, we will have an emission spectrum.
What will happen if we point our telescope at a galaxy?
- We will have some emission lines in the spectra.
Now, this depends on the slit and how you place it. If you let a lot of points go through, you're getting information from a big region.
Integral field spectroscopy
- Used first at 1789. But it wasn't until ~2000 that it was largely used.
@TODO: Fill
Integral field units
- Lenslet array
- Fibre array
- Image slicer
- Micro-slicer
Optimal performance: slicer (anyways, none of them is the best, each of them has advantages and disadvantages)
Uses of IFUs
- Earth remote sensing
- Weather forecasting
- Monitoring natural disasters and climate change
- Resolved stellar populations (stars, HII regions, planetary nebulae, galactic star formation)
- Extended objects (extragalactic): stellar and gas kinematics, stellar populations, gas content
- Crowded regions: distances of different galaxies at once; deblend AGN from hast galaxy emission
- Distant universe: properties of galaxies at z~2, lensed galaxies, measure many redshifts at once
Galaxy evolution with IFS
@Note: I stopped taking notes because the seminar was very interesting and I didn't have time to write everything down.