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STARS Amole Spectra of Science 2013. What are Stars? A large celestial body of hot gas that emits light Greeks grouped stars in patterns called constellations.

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Presentation on theme: "STARS Amole Spectra of Science 2013. What are Stars? A large celestial body of hot gas that emits light Greeks grouped stars in patterns called constellations."— Presentation transcript:

1 STARS Amole Spectra of Science 2013

2 What are Stars? A large celestial body of hot gas that emits light Greeks grouped stars in patterns called constellations Use the unit light-year to measure distances between stars – 9.5 x 10 15 m Driven by nuclear fusion reactions

3 Why do Stars look Different from One Another? Size Distance from Earth Temperature Stage of Life Cycle

4 Characteristics of Stars Color indicates temperature – Blue (Short λ ) = Hot – Red (Long λ ) = Cool – The hotter they are the faster they burn out Magnitude – Brightness – Smaller numbers represent brightest stars

5 Classification of Stars Classified by temperature and brightness Decreasing Temperature and brightness                  Oh, Be A Fine Girl, Kiss Me

6 Classification of Stars ClassTemperatureColor O20,000- 60,000 KBlue B10,000 – 30,000 KBlue-white A7,500 – 10,000 KWhite F6,000 – 7,500 KYellow-white G5,000 – 6,000 KYellow K3,500 – 5,000 KOrange M2,000 – 3,500 KRed

7 H-R Diagram

8 Nuclear Fusion Strong gravitational forces hold stars together Energy from fusion creates outward pressure balancing inward pull Hydrogen atoms are fused to form helium

9 Layers of Stars Energy moves through layers by radiation and convection May take millions of years for energy to work its way through star to surface After leaving the surface it enters space traveling at the speed of light, 3 x 10 8 m/s

10 Temperatures of the Sun

11 What Happens When a Star Runs out of H? Begins to fuse He Then, a succession of heavier elements Iron is the most stable; it requires energy verses creating it Star begins to die

12 Life Cycle of Stars

13 Stellar Nebula Nebulas are clouds of dust and gas from which stars are born – Grains of carbon and silicon Matter compresses due to own gravity Temperature and pressure slowly increase from compaction Omega Nebula

14 Eagle Nebula

15 Lagoon Nebula

16 Bubble Nebula

17 Crescent Nebula

18 Orion Nebula

19 Crab Nebula

20 Adult Star Actively undergoing hydrogen fusion Main Sequence star Spends most of its lifetime in this phase 90% of stars in the galaxy are in this phase An average size like our sun will “burn” much longer than a larger, more massive star

21 Red Giants and Supergiants When a star runs out of hydrogen, it begins to die Energy from fusion no longer counteracts gravity, and the core collapses Causes outer layers to expand Average stars create Red Giants Massive stars create Red Supergiants

22 White and Black Dwarfs Core runs out of He, and is no longer able to fuse the remaining heavier elements The star blows its outer layer away The core remains behind and burns as a white dwarf Eventually it cools to become a black dwarf Little Ghost Nebula

23 Stingray Nebula

24 Ring Nebula

25 Supernova Massive stars end in violent explosions that blow away the outer layers of the star These stars result in either a neutron star or supernova

26 Neutron Star Leftover core has between 1.4 – 3 solar masses Collapses so much that protons and electrons combine to form neutrons Very dense (a thimbleful weights more than 100 million tons) Emit radio waves (pulsars)

27 Black hole Leftover core has a mass greater than 3 solar masses Collapses so much that not even light can escape its gravity

28 Milky Way Black Hole

29 Death of a Star Simulations

30 Life Cycle of Stars


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