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Essays

The Distance to the Galactic Center

By Tim Hunter

Introduction

The Milky Way is a luminous band that encircles the sky and is readily visible to the naked eye from a dark sky location. Through a small telescope the Milky Way consists of thousands of faint stars. Because it completely encircles the sky, early observers concluded we live within it (Moore 2002). It is widest in Sagittarius where its width is more than 300. It was not realized until the twentieth century that the Solar System does not lie at the center of the Milky Way. According to Bok (1981): “There is much evidence to show that the galactic center lies in the direction of Sagittarius...[The irregular distribution of globular clusters first noted by Shapley]…is strong evidence for the existence of a distant center in Sagittarius.” There is a concentration toward Sagittarius of novae, distant variable stars, and planetary nebulae. Galactic rotation studies and strong radio emissions from the same part of the sky also support the presence of the Galactic center in Sagittarius (Bok 1981).

Shapley and Oort

In 1914 Shapley began a survey of globular clusters and estimated the distance to 93 of them using RR Lyrae stars. By calculating the center of the distribution of the globular clusters surrounding the Milky Way, he determined the Galactic center was in Sagittarius, and the Solar System was 13 kiloparsecs from the Galactic center (Reid 1993; Gino 2003). Oort came to the same conclusion regarding the location of the Galactic center by studying the motion of stars near the Sun. He found stars closer to the center of the galaxy had higher rotation speeds than those further from the center. This differential rotation was best explained by locating the center of the galaxy in Sagittarius. His Galactic center location was within 20 of that of Shapley (Gino 2003).

Work by Trumpler in the 1930’s showed interstellar gas and dust causes dimming of visual starlight as it passes through the dust and gas. Bok and others have shown that in the direction of the Galactic center there is much obscuring interstellar matter within two or three kiloparsecs of the Sun. Bok and Bok (1981) state there is “…25 to 30 magnitudes for the overlying obscuration in visible light between us and the galactic center.” When Shapley’s estimate for the distance to the Galactic center is revised to account for interstellar extinction, it becomes the basis for our modern value of 8 kiloparsecs (Reid 1993).

 

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