+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Date post: 26-Mar-2015
Category:
Upload: angelina-mcnulty
View: 222 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
27
Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II
Transcript
Page 1: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11HR Diagram part II

Page 2: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 3: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

HR Diagram for nearest16,000 stars:• Most stars lie along the

“Main Sequence”– Simple relationship

between temperature and luminosity

– Stars spend most of their lives converting hydrogen to helium, and this is what occurs when the star is on the main sequence

Page 4: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 5: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

L = 4πR2σT4

For a given radius, weCan sketch lines of Lvs T on the HR diagram

Red Dwarfs

Page 6: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 7: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 8: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 9: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 10: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Luminosity Classes:

Higher density gas > broader absorption lines in spectrumHigher density gas in star’s atmosphere > smaller star > smaller luminosity for a given temp.

L = 4πR2σT4

Page 11: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 12: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Lecture 8 Part 2Masses of Stars; Binary Star Systems

Page 13: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

How do you weigh a star?

Page 14: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Orbital Motion: An object in orbit around another object is in continual free-fall

How fast you orbit an object depends on your mass and how farout you are orbiting Therefore we need to look at binary stars systems

Page 15: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Binary StarsBetween 50% and 67% of all stars are in multiple star systems

Proxima Centauri....

... Orbits Alpha Centauri A and B

Page 16: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 17: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 18: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Kepler’s third law: MA + MB = a3/P2

a

A Ba = average separation of stars in astronomical unitsP = period of orbit in yearsMA + MB = total mass in terms of solar mass

Page 19: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

ra r b

A B

ra:r b = MA : MB

Page 20: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

I: Visual Binaries

Rigel

Page 21: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

I: Visual Binaries

Mizar

Page 22: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

II: Spectroscopic Binaries

Page 23: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 24: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

III: Eclipsing Binaries

Page 25: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.
Page 26: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

Mass-Luminosity Relation for the Main Sequence: L = M3.5

Page 27: Astronomy Problems 561: 02-15-11 HR Diagram part II.

+5

0

-5

-10

+10

+15

Absolute Magnitude


Recommended