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Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

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Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West
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Page 1: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Announcements

Comet SWAN!

Vega

West

Page 2: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Classifying the Stars

27 October 2006

Page 3: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Today:

• Stellar spectra: temperatures and compositions

• Are hotter stars brighter? (H-R diagrams)

• Determining sizes of stars

• Classifying stars, looking for patterns

Page 4: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Stellar Spectra

Page 5: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Pleiades Spectra

Page 6: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Edward Pickering and Harvard “computers,” 1890’s - 1920’s

Annie Jump Cannon

Page 7: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Classifying stellar spectra

Annie Jump Cannon

Page 8: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Classifying Stellar SpectraT

empe

ratu

re

“OBAFGKM”

Page 9: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

What are the stars made of?T

empe

ratu

re

Calcium SodiumMagnesium

Helium Hydrogen HydrogenHydrogen

Page 10: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Comte quote

“We understand the possibility of determining [celestial bodies’] shapes, their distances, their sizes and motions, whereas never, by any means, will we be able to study their chemical composition.

--Auguste Comte (philosopher), 1835

Page 11: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

How does temperature affect spectral lines?

Cecilia Payne at Harvard, 1924

In the sun, only one H atom in a million is in level 2, ready to absorb visible light!

Page 12: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

The Universal Recipe of the Stars

• 74% hydrogen (by mass)

• 25% helium

• 1% other elements (for most stars)

Page 13: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Are hotter stars brighter?

Plot known stars on “Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) diagram”. Luminosity increases vertically; temperature increases to the left.

Most stars’ dots lie along a diagonal (“main sequence”), the hotter the brighter.

Page 14: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

H-R Diagram Patterns

Lum

ino

sity

Luminosity =

(constant) x (surface area) x (temperature)4

For a given size, hotter implies brighter.

A bright, cool star must be unusually large (“red giant”).

A faint, hot star must be unusually small (“white dwarf”).

Page 15: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

H-R Diagram Patterns

Most of the stars near us are fainter (and cooler) than the sun; most of the familiar stars in the night sky are brighter than the sun.

Page 16: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Sizes of Main-Sequence Stars

Should be white, not green!

Hottest stars are actually somewhat larger

Reds are greatly exaggerated!

Page 17: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Summary of Stellar Properties

Distance Measure using parallax (if close enough)

Velocity Proper motion and Doppler shift

LuminosityCalculate from apparent brightness and distance

Temperature From overall color or spectral class

Composition From detailed analysis of spectral lines

SizeCalculate from temperature and luminosity

Page 18: Announcements Comet SWAN! Vega West. Classifying the Stars 27 October 2006.

Some familiar examples


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