
Wasp-17b: An Ultra-Low Density Planet in a Probable Retrograde
... WASP-17b the least dense planet known with a density of 0.06 – 0.14 ρJupiter ...
... WASP-17b the least dense planet known with a density of 0.06 – 0.14 ρJupiter ...
ph507lecnote07
... dust & rocks), outflow has stopped, the star is visible. Theory: Gas disperses, “planetesimals” form (100 km diameter rocks), collide & stick together due to gravity forming protoplanets). Protoplanets interact with dust disks: tidal torques cause planets to migrate inward toward their host stars. E ...
... dust & rocks), outflow has stopped, the star is visible. Theory: Gas disperses, “planetesimals” form (100 km diameter rocks), collide & stick together due to gravity forming protoplanets). Protoplanets interact with dust disks: tidal torques cause planets to migrate inward toward their host stars. E ...
main sequence star
... • Begins when almost all of the gases are used up by nuclear fusion and the star does not have enough energy to continue nuclear fusion. • The core of the star becomes unstable. • The star expands and changes temperature and luminosity (brightness). ...
... • Begins when almost all of the gases are used up by nuclear fusion and the star does not have enough energy to continue nuclear fusion. • The core of the star becomes unstable. • The star expands and changes temperature and luminosity (brightness). ...
Lecture 14: Star Formation
... Why are some regions of galaxies more efficient at star formation than others? Why are stars spinning so slowly? ...
... Why are some regions of galaxies more efficient at star formation than others? Why are stars spinning so slowly? ...
Solar System Summary Sheet File
... planets and asteroids which orbit the Sun or moons which orbit the planets. Gravity causes the heavier particles to pull closer to the Sun and so the inner planets are made of rock and therefore have the highest densities out of all the planets. The lighter gas particles are not pulled with such ...
... planets and asteroids which orbit the Sun or moons which orbit the planets. Gravity causes the heavier particles to pull closer to the Sun and so the inner planets are made of rock and therefore have the highest densities out of all the planets. The lighter gas particles are not pulled with such ...
Solar Systems - South Florida Museum
... Most of them have highly elliptical orbits, or are too close to their parent stars. ...
... Most of them have highly elliptical orbits, or are too close to their parent stars. ...
7.4 Meet Your Solar System
... • I can differentiate between the geocentric and heliocentric models of the solar system. • I can describe retrograde motion and explain why it happens. • I can describe the properties of the inner planet and the outer planets. ...
... • I can differentiate between the geocentric and heliocentric models of the solar system. • I can describe retrograde motion and explain why it happens. • I can describe the properties of the inner planet and the outer planets. ...
Lecture4
... The visible-light spectrum of the Sun is wrapped here end to end from red to blue. The dark “lines” are wavelengths that are absorbed by atoms in the Sun’s outer layers. There are millions of “lines” in the Sun’s spectrum. ...
... The visible-light spectrum of the Sun is wrapped here end to end from red to blue. The dark “lines” are wavelengths that are absorbed by atoms in the Sun’s outer layers. There are millions of “lines” in the Sun’s spectrum. ...
Ch.10 Stellar old age
... • H fusion is faster because C, N and O act as catalysts • Same net result: 4 H become 1 He. • No total gain or loss of C, N, O Question: How does energy produced by CNO cycle compare to PP chain? ...
... • H fusion is faster because C, N and O act as catalysts • Same net result: 4 H become 1 He. • No total gain or loss of C, N, O Question: How does energy produced by CNO cycle compare to PP chain? ...
SNC1PL The Life Cycle of Stars
... Massive stars (larger than the Sun) supernova and leave behind a neutron star (an extremely dense star composed of tightly packed neutrons) Neutron stars have immense gravitational force and tend to spin quickly. This spinning creates highfrequency radio waves, which have been detected by astronom ...
... Massive stars (larger than the Sun) supernova and leave behind a neutron star (an extremely dense star composed of tightly packed neutrons) Neutron stars have immense gravitational force and tend to spin quickly. This spinning creates highfrequency radio waves, which have been detected by astronom ...
The formation of stars and planets
... • Mars formed about 13 Megayears later • Earth formed 30 to 40 Megayear later – Leading theory for formation of the moon is that about 100 Myr after the birth of the solar system Earth was hit by a Mars-size object. The heavy cores of both objects formed the new Earth and the light silicate crusts f ...
... • Mars formed about 13 Megayears later • Earth formed 30 to 40 Megayear later – Leading theory for formation of the moon is that about 100 Myr after the birth of the solar system Earth was hit by a Mars-size object. The heavy cores of both objects formed the new Earth and the light silicate crusts f ...
Protostar, Initial mass, Main Sequence
... Red dwarf stars with less than half a solar mass do not achieve red giant status they begin to fade as soon as their hydrogen fuel is exhausted. White dwarfs, planetary nebulae Our Sun, and any star with similar mass, will fuse to carbon and, possibly, oxygen and neon before shrinking to become a wh ...
... Red dwarf stars with less than half a solar mass do not achieve red giant status they begin to fade as soon as their hydrogen fuel is exhausted. White dwarfs, planetary nebulae Our Sun, and any star with similar mass, will fuse to carbon and, possibly, oxygen and neon before shrinking to become a wh ...
Astronomy of extrasolar planetary systems
... Stars “burn” hydrogen, brown dwarfs do the same to deuterium, planets radiate away their energy while contracting The observed distribution of planet masses shows a deficiency of masses larger than ~12-13 Mjup (1 Mjup=0.001 Msun) A lower mass limit above which a star can burn deuterium is ~13 Mjup T ...
... Stars “burn” hydrogen, brown dwarfs do the same to deuterium, planets radiate away their energy while contracting The observed distribution of planet masses shows a deficiency of masses larger than ~12-13 Mjup (1 Mjup=0.001 Msun) A lower mass limit above which a star can burn deuterium is ~13 Mjup T ...
Using Protoplanetary Disks To Weigh The Youngest Stars
... and width of an observed gap on a protoplanetary disk In a protoplanetary disk, a large planet is able to create the so-called disk gap, which is a low gas density region along the planet's orbit, due to the gravitational interaction between the disc and the planet. The gap formation induced by the ...
... and width of an observed gap on a protoplanetary disk In a protoplanetary disk, a large planet is able to create the so-called disk gap, which is a low gas density region along the planet's orbit, due to the gravitational interaction between the disc and the planet. The gap formation induced by the ...
The Rocket Science of Launching Stellar Disks
... • Pulsation may trigger gas ejection. • Driving to orbital speed by light, perhaps from tilted bright spots??? ...
... • Pulsation may trigger gas ejection. • Driving to orbital speed by light, perhaps from tilted bright spots??? ...
On my webpage, find the link Star Life Cycle and use it to answer the
... A Solar Mass is equal to the mass of the Sun. If, for example, a star has 2 solar masses, it means it has twice as much mass as the Sun. Click the “brown dwarf” link in Option 1 6. How many solar masses are brown dwarfs on average? ...
... A Solar Mass is equal to the mass of the Sun. If, for example, a star has 2 solar masses, it means it has twice as much mass as the Sun. Click the “brown dwarf” link in Option 1 6. How many solar masses are brown dwarfs on average? ...
Scale Model of the Solar System
... rotating, condensing cloud of interstellar gas and dust • The cloud then collapsed under its own gravity – Localized regions of high density formed (?) – Blast wave from exploding star caused compression (?) – As cloud collapsed, it flattened into a disk because of its rotation (“solar nebula”) ...
... rotating, condensing cloud of interstellar gas and dust • The cloud then collapsed under its own gravity – Localized regions of high density formed (?) – Blast wave from exploding star caused compression (?) – As cloud collapsed, it flattened into a disk because of its rotation (“solar nebula”) ...