On Being Round
© Neil deGrasse Tyson
From Natural History magazine, March 1997
________________________________________________________
Apart
from crystals and broken rocks, not much else in the cosmos naturally comes
with sharp angles. While many
objects have peculiar shapes, the list of round things is practically endless
and ranges from simple soap bubbles to the entire observable universe. Spheres tend to take shape from the
action of simple physical laws. So
prevalent is this tendency that often we assume something is spherical in a
mental experiment just to glean basic insight even when we know that an object
is decidedly non-spherical. In
short, if you do not understand the spherical case, then you cannot claim to
understand the basic physics of the object.
Spheres
in nature are made by forces, such as surface tension, that want to make
objects smaller in all directions. The surface tension of the liquid that makes a soap bubble squeezes air
in all directions. It will, within
moments of being formed, enclose the volume of air using the least possible
surface area. This makes the strongest possible bubble because the soapy film
will not have to be spread any thinner than is absolutely necessary. It can be shown using freshman-level
calculus that the one and only shape that has the smallest surface area for an
enclosed volume is a perfect sphere. In fact, billions of dollars could be saved annually on packaging
materials if all shipping boxes and all packages of food in the supermarket
were spheres. For example, the
contents of a super-jumbo box of Cheerios would fit easily into a spherical
carton that had a four-and-a-half inch radius. But practical matters prevail -- nobody wants to chase food
down the aisle after it rolls off the shelves.
On
an orbiting space station, where everything is weightless, it would be a cinch
to make perfect ball bearings. On
Earth, one way to make them is to drop molten metal in pre-measured drops into
the top of a long shaft. The blob
will typically undulate until it settles into the shape of a sphere, but it
also needs sufficient time to harden before hitting the bottom. In a weightless environment, you just
gently squirt out precise quantities of your metal and you have all the time
you need to create perfect beads -- they just float there while they cool.
For
large cosmic objects, it's energy and gravity that conspire to turn themselves
objects into spheres. Gravity is
the force that serves to collapse matter in all directions, but gravity does
not always win -- chemical bonds of solid objects are strong. The Himalayan range in Tibet grew
against the force of Earth's gravity because of the resilience of crustal
rock. But before you get excited
about Earth's mighty mountains, you should know that the spread in height from
the deepest undersea trenches to the tallest mountains is about a dozen miles,
yet Earth's diameter is nearly eight thousand miles. So contrary to what it looks like to teeny humans crawling
on its surface, Earth, as a cosmic object, is remarkably smooth -- if you had a
gigantic finger, and if you rubbed it across Earth's surface (oceans and all),
Earth would feel as smooth as a cue ball. Expensive globes that portray raised portions of Earth's land masses to
indicate mountain ranges are grossly exaggerating reality.
Earth's
mountains are also puny when compared with some other mountains in the solar
system. The largest mountain on
Mars, Olympus Mons -- 65,000 feet tall and nearly 300 miles wide at its base --
makes Alaska's Mount McKinley look like a mole-hill. The cosmic mountain-building recipe is simple: the weaker the gravity on the surface
of an object, the higher its mountains can reach. Mount Everest is about as
tall as a mountain on Earth can grow before the lower rock layers succumb to
their own plasticity under the mountain's weight.
If
a solid object has a small enough surface gravity, the chemical bonds in its
rocks will resist the force of their own weight. When this happens, almost any shape is possible. Two famous celestial non-spheres are
Phobos and Deimos, the Idaho-potato-shaped moons of Mars. On thirteen-mile-long Phobos, the
bigger of the two moons, a 150-pound person would weigh about four ounces.
In
space, surface tension always forces a small blob of liquid to form a
sphere. And if the blob has very
high mass then it could be composed of almost anything and gravity will ensure
that it forms a sphere. Whenever
you see a small solid objects that is suspiciously spherical you can assume it
formed in a molten state.
Big
and massive blobs of gas in the galaxy can coalesce to form near-perfect,
gaseous spheres called stars. But
if a star finds itself orbiting too close to another object whose gravity is
significant, the spherical shape can be distorted as its material gets stripped
away. By "too close," I mean too
close to the object's Roche lobe -- named for the mid-nineteenth century
astronomer E. Roche, who made detailed studies of the gravity field in the
vicinity of double stars. The Roche lobe is an imaginary, dumbell-shaped,
bulbous, double-envelope that surrounds any two objects in mutual orbit. If gaseous material from one object
passes out of its own envelope, then the material will fall toward the second
object. This occurrence is
common among binary stars when one of them swells to become a red giant and
overfills its Roche lobe. The red
giant distorts into a distinctly non-spherical shape that resembles an
elongated Hershey's kiss.
The
stars of the Milky Way galaxy form a big, flat circle. With a diameter-to-thickness ratio of
1000:1, our galaxy is flatter than the flattest flapjacks ever made. No, it's not a sphere, but it probably
began as one. We can understand
the flatness by assuming the galaxy was once a big, spherical, slowly rotating
ball of collapsing gas. As it
swiftly collapsed, it spun faster and faster like a spinning figure skater
whose arms are drawn inward to increase the rotation speed. But not unlike a blob of tossed,
spinning pizza dough, the galaxy naturally flattened in response to the
increasing centrifugal forces that want to spread it apart. Yes, if the Pillsbury Dough Boy were a
figure skater, then fast spins would be a high-risk activity. Any stars that happened to be formed within
the Milky Way cloud before the collapse maintained large, plunging orbits. The remaining gas, which easily
sticks to itself (like a mid-air collision of two hot marshmallows), got pinned
at the mid-plane and is responsible for all subsequent generations of stars,
including the Sun. The current
Milky Way, which is neither collapsing nor expanding, is a gravitationally
mature system where one can think of the orbiting stars above and below the
disk as the skeletal remains of the original spherical gas cloud.
This
general flattening of objects that rotate is why Earth's pole-to-pole diameter
is smaller than its diameter at the equator. Not by much: three tenths of one percent -- about 26
miles. But Earth is small, mostly
solid, and doesn't rotate all that fast. At twenty-four hour per day, anything on Earth's equator is carried at a
mere 1,000 miles per hour. Consider the jumbo, fast-rotating, gaseous planet Saturn. Completing a day in just ten hours, its
equator revolves at 22,000 miles per hour and its pole-to-pole dimension is a
full ten percent flatter than its middle, a difference noticeable even through
a small amateur telescope. Flattened spheres are more generally called oblate spheroids, while
spheres that are elongated pole-to-pole are called prolate. In everyday life, hamburgers and hot
dogs make excellent (although somewhat extreme) examples of each shape. I don't know about you, but the planet
Saturn pops into my mind with every bite of a hamburger I take.
We
use the effect of centrifugal forces on matter to help calculate the rotation
rate of cosmic objects. Consider
pulsars. With some rotating at
over one hundred thousand RPM, we know that they cannot be made of household
ingredients. To picture a pulsar,
image the mass of the Sun packed into a ball the size of Manhattan. If that's hard to do, then imagine
stuffing about 50-million elephants into a thimble. To reach this density you must merge all electrons and
protons into neutrons by compressing all the empty space that atoms enjoy
around their nucleus and among their orbiting electrons. What's left is a ball of neutrons with
a mind-bogglingly high surface gravity. Existing under such conditions, a mountain range on a neutron star
needn't be any taller than the thickness of a sheet of paper for you to exert
more energy climbing onto it than a rock climber on Earth would exert ascending
a three-thousand-mile-high cliff. For these reasons, and others, we expect pulsars to be the most
perfectly shaped spheres in the universe.
For
rich clusters of galaxies, where hundreds are moving in beehive fashion around
the cluster's center of mass, the overall shape can offer rich astrophysical
insight. Some clusters are
raggedy, some are stretched along filaments, while others form vast
sheets. None of these have settled
into a stable shape. Some are so
extended that the fifteen billion years of the universe is insufficient time
for their constituent galaxies to make one crossing of the cluster. We conclude that the cluster was born
that way because the mutual gravitational encounters between and among galaxies
has had insufficient time to influence the shape the cluster.
But
other systems, such as the beautiful, spherically shaped Coma cluster of
galaxies (in the constellation Coma Berenices) tell us immediately that gravity
has shaped the cluster into a sphere and, as a consequence, you are as likely
to find a galaxy moving in one direction as in any other. Whenever this is true, the cluster
cannot be rotating all that fast otherwise we would see some of the flattening
that afflicted the Milky Way.
The
Coma cluster (like the Milky Way), is also gravitationally mature. In vernacular, such a system is
"relaxed," which means many things, including the fortuitous fact that the
average velocity of galaxies in the cluster serves as an excellent indicator of
the total mass, whether or not the total mass of the system is supplied by the
objects used to get the average velocity. In other words, gravitationally relaxed systems are excellent probes of
non-luminous "dark" matter. Allow
me to make an even stronger statement: were it not for relaxed systems, the ubiquity of dark matter (which may
comprise more than ninety percent of all matter in the universe) would have
remained undiscovered to this day.
The
ultimate sphere is the entire observable universe. In every direction we look, galaxies are observed to recede
from us at speeds proportional to their distance -- the famous signature of an
expanding universe as discovered by Edwin Hubble in 1929. Since nothing can be observed to travel
faster than light, there is a distance in every direction from us where the
recession velocity for a galaxy equals the speed of light. At this distance and beyond, the light
from luminous objects loses all it energy before reaching us. The universe beyond this spherical
"edge" is rendered invisible. And
as far as we know, unknowable.
Spheres
are indeed fertile theoretical tools that help us gain insight to all manner of
astrophysical problems. But
one should not be a sphere-zealot. I am reminded of the half-serious joke about how you might increase milk
production on a farm: An
expert in animal husbandry might say, "Consider the role of the cow's
diet..." An engineer might
say, "Consider the design of the milking machines..." But it's the astrophysicist who says, "Consider a spherical
cow…"!
________________________________________________________
Neil de Grasse Tyson is the Frederick P. Rose Director of New York City’s Hayden Planetarium. He also teaches astrophysics at Princeton University.
Back to List
|