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12-1 Notes - Stars Chapter 12, Lesson 1.

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Presentation on theme: "12-1 Notes - Stars Chapter 12, Lesson 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 12-1 Notes - Stars Chapter 12, Lesson 1

2 Stars Stars are balls of gas, mostly hydrogen, that produce light by nuclear reactions in their cores.

3 Layers of the Sun (outside - in)
4. 3. 2. 1.

4 Layers of the Sun (outside - in)
Corona 2,000,000 OC can only be seen during a solar eclipse.

5 Layers of the Sun (outside - in)
Chromosphere 5,000-10,000 OC can only be seen during a solar eclipse.

6 Layers of the Sun (outside - in)
Photosphere 5,000 OC - 8,000 OC this is the layer we get our light from on Earth

7 Layers of the Sun (outside - in)
Core 5,000,000 OC to 100,000,000 OC where energy is produced through nuclear fusion has enough fuel to last 10 billion years (currently 5 billion years old)

8 Other Features of the Sun
                                                                                                                                                                                                        Sunspots – areas of gas that are cooler Prominences – loops that link sunspot regions Solar Flares – explosions of gas that have been heated to millions of degrees Celsius.

9 Features of the Sun

10 Features of the Sun

11 Star Types Stars vary in diameters, masses, and surface temperatures.
Our Sun is a medium-sized star with a surface temperature of about 5800 OC.

12 Star Types

13 Star Types Properties of Different Types of Stars Type Diameter
(1=Sun’s dia.) Mass (1=Sun’s mass) Surface Temp. (K) Sun 1 5,800 OC 6, K Kelvin is one of the three best-known scales used to measure temperature, along with Fahrenheit and Celsius. Each unit on this scale, called a Kelvin rather than a degree, is equal to a degree on the Celsius scale. There are no negative numbers on the Kelvin scale, as the lowest number is 0 K.

14 Star Types Properties of Different Types of Stars Type Diameter
(1=Sun’s dia.) Mass (1=Sun’s mass) Surface Temp. (K) Supergiant 100x – 1,000x 8x -17x Variable

15 Star Types Properties of Different Types of Stars Type Diameter
(1=Sun’s dia.) Mass (1=Sun’s mass) Surface Temp. (K) Supergiant 100x – 1,000x 8x -17x Variable Red Giant 10x – 100x 1x – 4x 3,000 – 4,000

16 Star Types Properties of Different Types of Stars Type Diameter
(1=Sun’s dia.) Mass (1=Sun’s mass) Surface Temp. (K) Supergiant 100x – 1,000x 8x -17x Variable Red Giant 10x – 100x 1x – 4x 3,000 – 4,000 Main Sequence 0.1x – 15x 0.1x – 60x 2,400 – 50,000

17 Star Types Properties of Different Types of Stars Type Diameter
(1=Sun’s dia.) Mass (1=Sun’s mass) Surface Temp. (K) Supergiant 100x – 1,000x 8x -17x Variable Red Giant 10x – 100x 1x – 4x 3,000 – 4,000 Main Sequence 0.1x – 15x 0.1x – 60x 2,400 – 50,000 White Dwarf 0.01x 0.5x – 1.44x 6,000 – 100,000

18 Star Types Properties of Different Types of Stars Type Diameter
(1=Sun’s dia.) Mass (1=Sun’s mass) Surface Temp. (K) Supergiant 100x – 1,000x 8x -17x Variable Red Giant 10x – 100x 1x – 4x 3,000 – 4,000 Main Sequence 0.1x – 15x 0.1x – 60x 2,400 – 50,000 White Dwarf 0.01x 0.5x – 1.44x 6,000 – 100,000 Neutron Star 0.00x variable

19 Scale of Earth, the Sun, Rigel, VY Canis Majoris 3:02

20 Star Distances A light-year is the distance light travels in one year:
9,500,000,000,000 (9.5 trillion) km

21 Star Distances

22 Star Distances

23 Star Composition Stars can only be studied by the light they give off.
Spectroscopes are instruments used to study light, and figure out what elements are in a star.

24 Star Composition Light leaves star.
Light enters Earth’s cool atmosphere. Light passes through a prism to form a spectrum (rainbow).

25 Star Composition Dark lines (absorption lines) form along the rainbow because the cooler gases absorb certain wavelengths. Each element absorbs only certain wavelengths. Absorption lines help astronomers identify elements in stars, and this lets us know how old they are.

26 Star Composition

27 Star Composition

28 Star Composition

29 Star Temperature Heated metal goes from red to yellow to white.

30 Star Temperature Star color depends on temperature.
EVERYTHING gives off electromagnetic radiation.

31 Star Temperature The wavelength depends on temperature.
cooler temperatures = longer wavelengths higher temperatures = shorter wavelengths

32 Star Temperature The temperature of a star is indicated by the color it glows.

33 Oh Boy, Another F's Gonna Kill Me.
Star Temperature Oh Boy, Another F's Gonna Kill Me. The Harvard Stellar Classification System Type of Star Color Surface Temp (oC) O Blue Above 25,000 B Blue-White 10,000 – 25,000 A White 7,500 – 10,000 F Yellow-White 6,000 – 7,500 G Yellow 5,000 – 6,000 K Orange 3,500 – 5,000 M Red Below 3,500

34 Star Brightness A star’s brightness depends on two things:
energy given off distance

35 Star Brightness Astronomers use 2 ways to define star brightness:
apparent magnitude absolute magnitude

36 Star Brightness Apparent magnitude is how bright the star appears from Earth

37 Star Brightness Absolute magnitude is how bright the star appears at a standard distance of 32.6 light years from Earth (10 parsecs). Luminosity is measured by how much energy in joules is released per second (1 J/s = a watt)

38 Star Brightness

39 Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
All known stars are plotted on this graph. x-axis: temperature y-axis: luminosity (absolute magnitude)

40 Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
Main sequence 90% of stars are found in this region, a diagonal, curved line this is where stars spend most of their life cycle before they start to die

41 Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
The remaining stars fall into one of three other groups: Red giants Supergiants White dwarfs

42 Star Classifications

43 Star Classifications

44 H-R Diagram 1:34

45 If you know the temperature of any star, what else can you infer about that star?
A its size B its location in the galaxy C its color D its age

46 The apparent brightness of a star depends on what two things?
A magnitude and distance B distance and temperature C distance and absolute brightness D absolute brightness and temperature

47 A light-year is a unit of ____. A time B temperature C brightness
12.1 Stars A light-year is a unit of ____. A time B temperature C brightness D distance

48 As a star increases in absolute magnitude, it appears ____ on Earth.
A larger B hotter C brighter D more dense

49 The average distance between Earth and the Sun is called a(n) ____.
A light-year B astronomical unit C angstrom D solar unit

50 A star that is blue in color is ____ than a star red in color.
SCI 4.d A star that is blue in color is ____ than a star red in color. A hotter B cooler C larger D smaller


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