Surveying The Stars: Insert TCP 5e Chapter 15 Opener
Surveying The Stars: Insert TCP 5e Chapter 15 Opener
Surveying The Stars: Insert TCP 5e Chapter 15 Opener
Apparent brightness: Amount of starlight that reaches Earth (energy per second per square meter)
Thought Question
These two stars have about the same luminosity -- which one appears brighter?
A. Alpha Centauri B. The Sun
Luminosity passing through each sphere is the same. Apparent brightness decreases with distance. Area of sphere: 4 (radius)2
The relationship between apparent brightness and luminosity depends on distance: Brightness = Luminosity 4 (distance)2
We can determine a stars luminosity if we can measure its distance and apparent brightness: Luminosity = 4 (distance)2 x (Brightness)
Thought Question
How would the apparent brightness of Alpha Centauri change if it were three times farther away?
A. B. C. D. It would be only 1/3 as bright It would be only 1/6 as bright It would be only 1/9 as bright It would be three times brighter
Parallax is the apparent shift in position of a nearby object against a background of more distant objects.
Apparent positions of nearest stars shift by about an arcsecond as Earth orbits Sun.
Parallax is measured by comparing snapshots taken at different times and measuring the shift in angle to star.
The most luminous stars: 106 LSun Least luminous stars: 10-4 LSun (LSun is luminosity of Sun)
apparent brightness of Star 1 1/ 5 m1 m 2 = (100 ) apparent brightness of Star 2 luminosity of Star 1 = (1001/ 5 ) M 1 M 2 luminosity of Star 2
Absolute Magnitude
Defined as the apparent magnitude of a star if it were at a distance of 10 pc (32.6 ly).
Every object emits thermal radiation with a spectrum that depends on its temperature.
Solid
Lines in a stars spectrum correspond to a spectral type that reveals its temperature: (Hottest) O B A F G K M (Coolest)
Visual Binary
Eclipsing Binary
Spectroscopic Binary
Direct mass measurements are possible only for stars in binary star systems. p2 = 42 G (M1 + M2) a3
Luminosity
An H-R diagram plots the luminosity versus the surface temperature of stars.
Temperature
Main Sequence
Most stars fall somewhere on the main sequence of the H-R diagram.
Large radius
Main Sequence
Stars with lower T and higher L than mainsequence stars must have larger radii:
Main Sequence
Stars with higher T and lower L than mainsequence stars must have smaller radii:
Small radius
white dwarfs
A stars full classification includes spectral type (line identities) and luminosity class (line shapes, related to the size of the star): I II III IV V - supergiant - bright giant - giant - subgiant - main sequence
Temperature
Luminosity
Temperature
Temperature
Temperature
Temperature
Main-sequence stars are fusing hydrogen into helium in their cores like the Sun. Luminous mainsequence stars are hot (blue). Less luminous ones are cooler (yellow or red).
measurements of mainsequence stars show that the hot, blue stars are much more massive than the cool, red ones.
Low-mass stars
Low-mass stars
Core pressure and temperature of a highermass star needs to be larger in order to balance gravity.
Temperature: from color and spectral type (0.08 MSun) 3,000 K - 50,000 K (100 MSun) Mass: from period (p) and average separation (a) of binary-star orbit 0.08 MSun - 100 MSun
10 times as much fuel, uses it 104 times as fast 10 million years ~ 10 billion years x 10 / 104 Life expectancy of 0.1 MSun star: 0.1 times as much fuel, uses it 0.01 times as fast 100 billion years ~ 10 billion years x 0.1 / 0.01
Luminosity
B C
Temperature
D Luminosity
Which of these stars will have changed the least 10 billion years from now? C
B C
Temperature
D Luminosity
B C
Temperature
Variable Stars
Any star that varies significantly in brightness with time is called a variable star. Some stars vary in brightness because they cannot achieve proper balance between power welling up from the core and power radiated from the surface. Such a star alternately expands and contracts, varying in brightness as it tries to find a balance.
The light curve of this pulsating variable star shows that its brightness alternately rises and falls over a 50-day period.
Globular cluster: Up to a million or more stars in a dense ball bound together by gravity.
Massive blue stars die first, followed by white, yellow, orange, and red stars.
Pleiades now has no stars with life expectancy less than around 100 million years.
Main-sequence turnoff
To determine accurate ages, we compare models of stellar evolution to the cluster data.
Detailed modeling of the oldest globular clusters reveals that they are about 13 billion years old.