* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Introduction to Stars: Their Properties
Observational astronomy wikipedia , lookup
Dyson sphere wikipedia , lookup
Corona Borealis wikipedia , lookup
Star catalogue wikipedia , lookup
Astronomical spectroscopy wikipedia , lookup
Canis Minor wikipedia , lookup
Aries (constellation) wikipedia , lookup
Astronomical unit wikipedia , lookup
Star of Bethlehem wikipedia , lookup
Auriga (constellation) wikipedia , lookup
Stellar evolution wikipedia , lookup
Cassiopeia (constellation) wikipedia , lookup
Corona Australis wikipedia , lookup
Star formation wikipedia , lookup
Canis Major wikipedia , lookup
Timeline of astronomy wikipedia , lookup
Cygnus (constellation) wikipedia , lookup
Perseus (constellation) wikipedia , lookup
Cosmic distance ladder wikipedia , lookup
1 http://stardate.org/radio/program/delta-lyrae 2 Learning goals:  Explain what is meant by the parallax of a star, how we measure it and use it to find the distance to a star. Define arc second, parsec.  Define brightness, apparent magnitude, absolute magnitude. Describe the methods used to determine the temperature, luminosity, and radius of a star. 3 Questions: Which stars are the brightest? Which stars are putting out the most watts? (luminosity = energy per second) NEED TO KNOW: Distances The most fundamental and accurate (within a certain range) means of finding distances is measuring the parallaxes of stars. 4 You already know about the parallax effect: Demonstrating parallax Parallax of Stars •Explain what is meant by the parallax of a star, how we measure it and use it to find the distance to a star. 5 Define arc second How many degrees in a circle? How many arc minutes in a degree? How many arc seconds in an arc minute? How many arc seconds in a degree? How many arc seconds in a circle? __?__ radians = 360 degrees 1 radian = 57.3 degrees How many arc seconds in 1 radian? 360, 60, 60, 3600; 1,296,000; 2 pi; 206,265 arc sec/rad 6 PARSEC: Parallax ARc SECond A star having a parallax of 1 arc second is 1 parsec away 1 parsec (pc) = 3.26 light years 1 kiloparsec (1 kpc) = 1000 pc; 1 megaparsec (1 Mpc) = 1,000,000 pc Baseline is 1 Astronomical Unit Small angle formula for distance in AU’s: • Define arc second, parsec 7  Works accurately for stars within about 200 pc (Hipparchos satellite)  Biggest problem: measuring the miniscule shift of a star against more distant stars parallax  0.75 arcseconds 1 distance =  1.3 pc  4.3 ly 0.75 parallax  0.15 arcseconds 1 distance =  __?__ 6.7 pc  __?__ 22 ly 0.15 parallax  0.0015 arcseconds 1 distance =  __?__ 667 pc  __?__ 2170lyly 0.0015 •Explain what is meant by the parallax of a star, how we measure it and use it to find the distance to a star. 8 •Explain what is meant by the parallax of a star, how we measure it and use it to find the distance to a star. 9 Using SIMBAD to find the parallaxes of the stars of Exercise 2 41 Cygni data (partial) QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Parallax = 4.24 ± 0.16 mas or 0.00424 ± 0.00016 arc seconds Distance = 1/parallax = 1/0.00424 = 236 pc or ~770 ly 10 Inverse square law for light p. 494 QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. 11 How the star looks to US HERE ON EARTH. L apparent brightness = 4 D2 1000 times farther away  100 Watt 1000 Watt Qui ckTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see thi s pi cture.  1 Watts 10 times farther away  Qui ckTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see thi s pi cture. Qui ckTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see thi s pi cture. Qui ckTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see thi s pi cture. 2 x farther away, 1/4 as bright 3 x farther away, 1/9 as bright • Define brightness, apparent magnitude, absolute magnitude 12  Every 5 magnitudes difference means 100 x difference in brightness  One magnitude difference QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. is 2.512 times in brightness. (2.5125 = 100) • Define brightness, apparent magnitude, absolute magnitude 13 When you see only “magnitude,” that means APPARENT magnitude. 1. The magnitude (m) of star A is 1, the magnitude (m) of star B is 6. How many times brighter is A than B? a) 5 b) 10 c) 100 d) 1000 2. m of star C is 12, m of star D is 2: How many times brighter is star D than star C? (Or, equally stated, how many times dimmer is star C than star D?) a) 10 b) 24 c) 100 d) 10,000 3. The Sun is the brightest star in the sky, with an apparent magnitude of about -26.5 Sirius is next in line, with an apparent magnitude of -1.5; how many times brighter is the Sun than Sirius? a) 25 b) 28 c) 100,000 d) 10,000,000,000 14 Using SIMBAD to find the apparent magnitudes of the stars of Exercise 2 41 Cygni data (partial) QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. V = apparent magnitude through “visual” filter Think of it as mv . UV QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IR 15 Absolute magnitude is the apparent magnitude a star would have if its distance = 10 parsecs. m  M  5log10 (d pc )  5 M  m  5log10 (d pc )  5 Relates luminosities by “placing” stars on common scale. Smaller the absolute magnitude number, the more luminous the star. 41 Cygni dpc = 236 parsecs mv = 4.016  M v  mv  5log 10 (d pc )  5 M v  4.016  5log 10 (236)  5 M v  4.016  5(2.37)  5  2.8 What does the answer tell you?  • Define brightness, apparent magnitude, absolute magnitude 16 Define brightness, apparent and absolute magnitude 17 Supergiant Bright-Giant Giant Sub-Giant Main Sequence Star (dwarf) I II III IV V We estimate the luminosity of a star by measuring how broad the absorption lines are in its spectrum. At a given temperature, the less luminous stars have atoms colliding a lot more than in the giant stars. • Describe the methods used to determine temperature, luminosity, radius 18 Luminosity High Low High Temperature Low19 Using SIMBAD to find the parallaxes of the stars of Exercise 2 41 Cygni data (partial) QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. F5 Iab 20 The H-R Diagram L  4 R 2  T 4 21 Relationship between absolute magnitude and luminosity - bring in the Sun! Lstar    M Sun  M star  2.5log 10 LSun   M Sun  M star Lstar     log 10 2.5 LSun   M Sun M star  10 M Sun M star  10 2.5 2.5  10 L  log10  star L   Sun Lstar  LSun M Sun M star  Lstar 2.5  10 LSun 4.74 (2.8) Lstar 2.5  10  1070 LSun Lstar 1070LSun 22 Depends on •Size (radius, R) •Temperature Luminosity L  4 R 2  T 4 L  4 R 2  T 4 2 4 Lstar  4 Rstar  Tstar 2 LSun  4 RSun  TSun4 Lstar 4 R  LSun 4 R 2 star 2 Sun T T 4 star 4 Sun  Rstar 2 Tstar 4      R  Sun  TSun  Lstar TSun 4 Rstar 2       L T R  Sun  star   Sun  Rstar  Lstar TSun 4 TSun 2 Lstar            R L T T L  Sun   Sun  star   star   Sun  2 2 Rstar TSun  Lstar  5770  1070            RSun Tstar  LSun  6440   1  Rstar  26 or Rstar  26RSun RSun • Describe the methods used to determine temperature, luminosity, radius 23 The H-R Diagram 24
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            