Constellations (Autosaved)
Constellations (Autosaved)
Constellations (Autosaved)
CONSTELLATIONS
- Are imaginary group of stars which can either
be in a form of animals, objects, and people.
CONSTELLATIONS
STARS
- Are enormous glowing ball of hot gas.
- Are huge celestial bodies made mostly of hydrogen and
helium that produce light and heat from the churning
nuclear forges inside their cores.
- Aside from our sun, the dots of light we see in the sky are
all light-years away from Earth.
- They are the building blocks of galaxies, of which there
are billions in the universe.
- It’s impossible to know how many stars exist, but
astronomers estimate that in our Milky Way galaxy alone,
there are about 300 billion.
STARS
- The Milky Way is the galaxy where our solar system
belongs.
- All the individual stars you see in the night sky are
members of our galaxy.
- An average person can only see only about 3,000 stars on
the average.
- The sun is the closest star to Earth as compared to some
other stars that we see at night.
- UY Scuti is the largest known star by radius.
- VY Canis Majoris is the biggest known star.
Star Comparison
Mind Blowing
FACTS ABOUT THE STARS
1. How long will stars live?
Stars live (perhaps billions of years) as long
as their hydrogen is enough and does not runs
out. Hydrogen is the nuclear fuel of the star. If
a star runs out of Hydrogen, the star will
expand while the core contracts. The star now
begins to glow red.
FACTS ABOUT THE STARS
2. Do they get old?
3,600 - 5,000
2,000 – 3,600
CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
3. Surface Temperature – Astronomers measure a star's
temperature on the Kelvin scale. Zero degrees on the Kelvin scale
is theoretically absolute and is equal to -273.15 degrees Celsius.
The coolest, reddest stars are approximately 2,500 K, while the
hottest stars can reach 50,000 K. Our sun is about 5,778 K.
CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
4. Mass - Stellar mass is a phrase that is used by
astronomers to describe the mass of a star.
Stellar mass is measured in terms of our own sun, with 1
equal to the size of our sun. For instance, Rigel, which is
much larger than our sun, has a mass of 3.5 solar
masses. Two stars of a similar size may not necessarily
have the same mass, as stars can vary greatly in density.
It is usually enumerated in terms of the Sun's mass as a
proportion of a solar mass (M☉)
CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
4. Stellar Mass -
CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
5. Size - Astronomers measure the size of a given star in
terms of our own sun's radius. Thus, a star that measure
1 solar radius would be the same size as our sun. The
star Rigel, which is much larger than our sun, measures
78 solar radii. A star's size, along with its surface
temperature, will determine its luminosity.
4. Size CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
4. Size
CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
4. Size
CHARACTERISTICS OF STARS
4. Size
CONSTELLATIONS
4. Size