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Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear...

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Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars
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Page 1: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Chapter 8:

Characterizing Stars

Page 2: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

As the Earth movesaround the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial sphere.

Page 3: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.
Page 4: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.
Page 5: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Stellar Parallax (link to 3d simulation)A Parsec is the

distance from us that has a parallax

of one arc second(parsec = pc)

1 parsec = 206,265 A.U. or about 3.3 light-years

Page 6: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

The Sun’s Neighborhood

Each successive circle has a

radius which is 0.5 parsec

larger

About 21 systems

are shown(some are binaries)

Page 7: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Some nearby stars

• Proxima Centauri, a companion to Alpha Centauri, has a parallax angle of 0.76” (arc seconds) so the distance is 1/.76 = 1.3 parsecs.

• 1 parsec = 3.3 light-years, so the Alpha Centauri system is about 4.3 light-years away, or about 270,000 A.U., a typical distance between stars.

• Barnard’s star is another example; it is 1.8 pc away.• Analogy: Sun and Earth at 1 m distance from each

other, the Sun is a golf ball, the Earth a grain of sand, and the nearest star is 270 km away (St. Louis).

Page 8: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

In addition to the apparent motion due

to parallax, stars also have Real Space Motion.

Study of Barnard’s Star over a period of 22 years

reveals that it has a transverse velocity

of 88 km/sec.

Page 9: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Hipparcos spacecraft being put into a huge vacuum chamber for environmental tests.

This satellite was able to measure the positions of thousands of stars with very high accuracy. (1989-1993)

Page 10: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Hipparcos spacecraft mission (European Space Agency,1989-93)

• This space mission, named after the ancient Greek astronomer, was the very first space mission for measuring the positions, distances, motions, brightness and colors of stars. The science of astrometry is the measurement of astronomical objects.

• ESA's Hipparcos satellite pinpointed more than 100,000 stars, with measurements of position that were 200 times more accurate than ever before. The accuracy is equivalent to an angle of the height of a person standing on the Moon.

• The primary product from this mission was a set of stellar catalogues, The Hipparcos and Tycho Catalogues, published by ESA in 1997. Some of this data is available on the web site: “The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission” (link)

Page 11: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Inverse-Square Law for Light – means that the light is “diluted” or spread out over a larger area as it travels away.

Page 12: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.
Page 13: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Luminosity contributes to apparent magnitude, so two unlike objects at different distances may appear the same.

Page 14: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Magnitudes of some stars in the vicinity of Orion.

Sirius is the brightest star in the sky.

Page 15: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Apparent Magnitude

of some typical objects,

along with some limits for seeing through

various instruments.

Page 16: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

More on the Magnitude Scale

The absolute magnitude is the

apparent magnitude when viewed from 10 pc

Our sun would appear to have an apparent magnitude

of 4.8 if it were at 10 pc distance, so it has an

absolute magnitude of 4.8

Page 17: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Magnitude Scale

(This is inverted from the

previous version)

Page 18: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Star Colors vary from red to blue; an example is in Orion.

Page 19: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Many star colors are seen in dense regions near the center of the Milky Way galaxy.

Page 20: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.
Page 21: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

The color of a star is due to its temperature.

Blackbody spectra (continuous curve) for some representative objects (brown dwarf, Sun, Rigel)

Page 22: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Blackbody Curves

for some typical star

temperatures

Only twopoints are needed to determine

the temperature.

Page 23: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Stellar Spectra

These are simulated spectra.

Real spectra have lots of

fine structure.

Simulated elemental

spectra: (link)

Page 24: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.
Page 25: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Betelgeuse is large enough to be imaged and some features can be observed. So we get a direct measurement of its size.

Page 26: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Stellar Sizes:

from 300 times the size of

the Sun to only

0.01 times the size of

the Sun.

Page 27: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Stellar sizes• Some stars are close enough and big enough

to be seen as disks, for example Betelguese.• Most stars look like points, so we need to

deduce the size from the luminosity (based on the apparent magnitude) and the temperature by a formula:

• luminosity (radius)2 x (temperature)4

• (where means “is proportional to”)

Page 28: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Antares is 300 times the size of the Sun.

It would reach almost the

distance to the orbit of Mars if it replaced the

Sun in our solar system.

Page 29: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Some stars are near the size of the Sun.

Page 30: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Small stars (dwarfs) range from the size of the Sun to only 0.01 times the size of the Sun.

Page 31: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Chapter 10: Stars

Part 2 -

with a quick review

of part 1

Answer questions

on the worksheet as we go

(for extra credit).

Page 32: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Stellar Parallax

A Parsec is the distance from us that has a parallax

of one arc second(parsec = pc)

1 parsec = 206,265 A.U. or about 3.3 light-years

Page 33: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Questions 1 and 2

Stellar Parallax

The parallax angle is an angle in the triangle

with a baseline of one astronomical unit

(1 A.U.)

Page 34: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 1

• One parsec corresponds to an angle of 1 arc second.

• 10 parsecs would correspond to an angle of 1/10 of an arc second.

• And 50 parsecs would correspond to an angle of 1/50 of an arc second.

• Star X is nearer and has the greater parallax angle.

Page 35: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 2

• We measure the parallax angle in order to find the distance, so we can calculate the absolute magnitude.

Page 36: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

The Sun’s Neighborhood

Each successive circle has a

radius which is 0.5 parsec

larger

About 21 systems

are shown(some are binaries)

Page 37: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Inverse-Square Law for Light - question 3.

Page 38: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 3

• The farther star is 4 times as far away.

• Thus it is fainter.

• 4 times 4 is 16, so it is 16 times fainter.

• Imagine one more shell in the previous picture, with 4x4 or 16 squares.

Page 39: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Two unlike objects at different distances may appear the same – question 4

Page 40: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 4

• Just like the picture, the closer star must be dimmer, if it appears as bright as the farther star.

• Thus the closer star has a lower luminosity (amount of light emitted).

Page 41: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Apparent Magnitude

of some typical objects,

along with some limits for seeing through

various instruments.

Question 5

Page 42: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 5

• An 8th magnitude star is one magnitude greater than a 7th magnitude star, so it is dimmer.

• Each magnitude corresponds to a change in brightness of 2.5 times.

• So the 8th magnitude star is 2.5 times dimmer than the 7th magnitude star.

Page 43: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

The absolute magnitude is the

apparent magnitude when viewed from 10 pc

Our sun would appear to have an apparent magnitude

of 4.8 if it were at 10 pc distance, so it has an

absolute magnitude of 4.8

Question 6

Once we get the absolute magnitude from the apparent magnitude and the distance,

we can get the luminosity compared to the Sun.

Page 44: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 6

• The concept of absolute magnitude allows us to remove the effect of differing distance.

• Thus we can talk about the properties of the star itself, without needing to keep in mind the location (or distance from us).

Page 45: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Star Colors vary from red to blue – question 7

Page 46: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 7

• The color of a star will not change if we look at it from a different distance …

• unless there is a dust cloud in the way.

• However, the angular size, parallax, apparent magnitude, and proper motion would appear to change at different distances.

Page 47: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.
Page 48: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

spectral classification uses letters for the

spectral classes: OBAFGKM (and LT)

based on the star’s temperature.

Page 49: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Summary so far

To measure the stars, we measure the 1. apparent magnitude2. distance (by parallax)3. spectrum (to find the temperature)

and so we can deduce the luminosityand spectral class (OBAFGKM-LT)

Page 50: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Stellar Sizes:

from 300 times the size of

the Sun to only

0.01 times the size of

the Sun.

Page 51: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Stellar sizes• Some stars are close enough and big enough

to be seen as disks, for example Betelguese.• Most stars look like points, so we need to

deduce the size from the luminosity (based on the apparent magnitude) and the temperature by a formula:

• luminosity (radius)2 x (temperature)4

• (where means “is proportional to”)

• Questions 8 and 9

Page 52: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 8

• From the formula:

• luminosity (radius)2 x (temperature)4

• If the radius is not changed, but the temperature is increased from T to 2T then 2T times 2T times 2T times 2T gives a number 16 times greater than T4

Page 53: Chapter 8: Characterizing Stars. As the Earth moves around the Sun in its orbit, nearby stars appear in different apparent locations on the celestial.

Question 9

• From the formula:

• luminosity (radius)2 x (temperature)4

• If the temperature is not changed, but the radius is increased from r to 2r then 2r times 2r gives 4r2 - which is 4 times greater than r2


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