The Bridge V Learning Edition 1 ; our solar system | Page 51

Curriculum topic Galaxies Education level Secondary School, Informal Location Indoors (small, e.g. classroom) Big idea of science Earth is a very small part of the universe. Time 1h Core skills Planning and carrying out investigations, Analysing and interpreting data, Constructing explanations, Communicating information Keywords Galaxies Age range 14 - 19 Group size Group Supervised for safety Unsupervised Cost Low (< ~5 EUR) Type of learning activity Full enquiry BRIEF DESCRIPTION This classroom activity for high school students uses a collection of Hubble Space Telescope images of galaxies in the Coma Cluster. Students study galaxy classification and the evolution of galaxies in dense clustered environments. GOALS ˆ Students will learn the basics of galaxy classification by making use of real astronomical data from the Hubble Space Telescope. Classification is a scientific practice important in many different fields of science; by simplifying a diversity of objects into a smaller number of categories, it becomes easier to see what characteristics are shared by many objects, and study these properties of representative objects, rather than each object individually. ˆ Students will discover a "morphology-density effect" and then make hypotheses about the causes of this effect. LEARNING OBJECTIVES ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ Students will be able to classify different galaxy types based on astronomical images. Students will explain the importance of classifying objects. Students will propose ideas for why galaxies might have different shapes. Students will practice asking questions and planning investigations. Students will discuss the ideas that there are physically different environments throughout the universe that galaxies live in, that galaxies interact, and that there is a relationship between environment and galaxy morphology (called the "morphology- density effect"). ˆ Students will make hypotheses about the cause of the morphology-density effect. EVALUATION www.space-awareness.org