Rotation and Flattening Lesson
Overview
As we observe the thousands of galaxies in the visible universe, we find that
many of them are flattened disks. Because the process of galaxy formation is
too slow to watch, scientists study it with computational models. This
lesson/activity demonstrates how one might explain the appearance of so many
flat galaxies with a computational model.
Preparation and Materials
The teacher should be familiar with the GalaxSee application (for
those unfamiliar with this software, there is an online tutorial), have it loaded on a
computer, and have some means of displaying the monitor to the class.
Objectives
Students will
- use a computational model to discover
possible answers to a question about a natural phenomenon
- practice accurately observing and recording data from a scientific experiment
- communicate and defend a scientific argument while collaborating
with other students.
Standards
This lesson fulfills portions of the following standards and curriculum
guidelines:
Activities
- If the students have not observed through previous activities the fact
that many galaxies (including our own) are flat disks, show them
images of several galaxies (available at numerous sites on the World Wide Web)
and allow them to discover this fact.
- Make the following points about galaxy formation:
- The process is extremely slow--it takes billions of years for a
galaxy to form.
- Because of this, we cannot watch the formation happen.
- In order to try to understand galaxy formation, scientists model
galaxies on computers and, by watching the model evolve, they hope to learn
why real galaxies have the features that we observe.
- If we are to accomplish anything in science, it is extremely
important that we are careful observers.
- With the monitor displayed so that the students can see it, make sure
that the Galaxy Setup is for a spherical galaxy of 256 stars
that are
500 solar masses each, with the rotation factor set to zero.
Generate a new
galaxy (or, if you also have the
Dark Matter
parameter set to zero, you can use
the pre-generated galaxy "no_rotation.gal" at this web site.
Run the simulation, and have the students watch what happens.
Rotate the galaxy
for them so they can see it from different angles. Let the
simulation run until the stars clump together in the center. Stop the
simulation, and have the students write (briefly) what they observed.
Note: As the stars clump to the center, their speeds will increase
rapidly, and error
will start to accumulate in the model. If this is allowed to continue, the
model will become
unrealistic, and could, for example, throw all of the stars out beyond the
original boundaries.
This is an inaccurate result, and if you allow the simulation to run beyond
the initial clumping,
you should be sure to discuss the implications of error in the model.
For more information about detecting and controlling error, see the section
about the info
window in
the GalaxSee tutorial.
- Now change the setup described in #3 so that the rotation factor is
1. Generate a new
galaxy (or use the one named "rotation.gal"
that
came with this distribution), run it, and have
the students observe the results. When a significant amount
of flattening is observable (note that you will have to rotate your view of
the galaxy to observe the flattening), stop the simulation, and again have them
write
what they observed.
Discussion of the Simulation
Ask the students to discuss the differences between the two simulations. Ask
them if they can think of other situations in which rotation flattens things.
(Like hand-tossed pizza crust, spinning a Koosh® ball or key ring, for
example).
Discussion of Observation
Ask the students to look at what they wrote about the two simulations. Tell
them to suppose that they were the first people in the world to discover that
rotating galaxies flatten over time. Is what they wrote adequate to explain this
new discovery to the public or to other scientists? What would they need to
include in or change about their writing in order to make
it useful
and clear to another person? Are they sure that they understand the
relationship?
Should they do more or different tests? Have them critique their own writing from
this
standpoint, and discuss what they learned from this.
Assign them to write a clear and accurate report of what they observed.
Emphasize that it is important that they know what software was used, and
what parameters were set. Be sure to go through the setup procedure again so
that they
can record this information.
Collaboration
After they have polished their reports, have the other group of
students attempt to repeat the experiment as described in the report, verify the
findings of the first group, and provide feedback about their methods and
conclusions.
Encourage both groups to ask questions of each other's procedure and
observations. If another group of students is not available, you could split
one class into two large groups and require them to communicate only through
writing.
Extensions
-
Further Experimentation
Have the students use GalaxSee to try different values for the
rotation, number
of stars, dark matter, distributions, etc,
observing and recording the effects.
For example, have each student create a different galaxy, iterate it, and
record the experiment (including initial conditions). Then have the students
exchange reports with one another, and
attempt to repeat each others' experiments, comparing and reporting on the
similarities
or differences of the results.
-
Thinking Harder
Ask the students how they would verify the conjecture that flattening in
galaxies may be a result of spinning. One way to do this is to see if the
flat galaxies we observe in nature are spinning (they are, and this is
observable with photometric tools attached to telescopes). However, not all
of the galaxies that we observe are flat. What would we expect to find if we
observed them to see if they were spinning? How might what we find from
these observations cause us to modify our conjecture?
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