Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byWillis Whitehead Modified over 9 years ago
1
Star Light, Star Bright Going from the Sun to other Stars
2
Giving a Star a Physical Use Starlight! Distances- use stellar parallax Luminosity- same as sun (careful!) Temperature- same as sun Diameter- use Luminosity and Temperature Mass- save it for later
3
Distance Stellar Parallax New unit- parsec (pc) 1 pc= 206,265 AU= 3.1x10 16 m “parallax in arc seconds” Distance (pc)=1/parallax (arc sec) Lightyear-distance light travels in one year 1pc=3.3ly
4
Distance Another Method- Standard Candles Know the brightness a star should have If it appears dimmer, it must be further away Estimate distance based on dimness Often used for extragalactic objects
5
Parallax Star Sun Earth Parallax Angle 1 AU
6
Sun’s Neighbors Closest neighbor- Proxima Centauri – 1.3 pc away (4.3 ly) 300,000 times distance between Earth and Sun About 30 stars within 4pc Many are multiple star systems We can measure parallax out to 100pc
7
Diameter Radius-Luminosity-Temperature relationship Use color to find temperature Use Stefan-Boltzmann Law to find Luminosity L R 2 T 4 Star w/same T as Sun but Bigger L must be larger in size!
8
Temperature Remember that Blackbodies will appear different “colors” depending upon Temperature Cool stars – Red Hot stars – Blue
9
Spectra of a Star Indication of energy emitted at every wavelength of light Tells us many things Composition, temperature, luminosity, velocity, rotation speed are just some
10
Spectral Classification Detailed spectra of stars allow better classification Lines that are present allow star to be “pigeonholed” Orignal scheme was loosely based on color 4 classes: White, Yellow, Red, Deep Red
11
History of Spectral Types Edward Pickering at Harvard Hired “computers” Williamina Fleming started with A – Strength of H lines only She classified 10,000 stars Pickering published her work in 1890
12
History of Spectral Types Annie Jump Cannon developed new scheme Pared Fleming’s number of classes Included subdivisons Classified 400,000 stars in her lifetime Her system is the standard used today
13
Spectral Classification Pickering (Harvard) assigned letters to original classes (A-M) Annie Jump Cannon rearranged classes based on temperature (Payne’s system) Non-alphabetical OBAFGKM (LT)(RNS)
14
Families of Stars www.hubblesite.org
15
Spectral Types O star – Ionized He, weak H lines – T>25,000 K – Electric Blue (peaks in UV) – Example: Stars in Orion’s Belt
16
Spectral Types B star – Neutral He, moderate H lines – T=25,000 K-11,000K – Blue (peaks in UV) – Example: Rigel
17
Spectral Types A star Very Strong H lines T=11,000-7,500K Peaks in Violet Example: Sirius, Vega
18
Spectral Types F star Moderate H lines and Ionized Ca T=7,500-6,000K Blue Example: Polaris, Canopus
19
Spectral Types G star Weak H lines and Strong Ionized Ca T=6,000-5,000K Yellow Example: Sun, Alpha Centauri
20
Spectral Types K star Lines of neutral and singly ionized metal, some molecules T=5,000-3,500K Red Example: Arcturus, Aldeberan
21
Spectral Types M star Strong Molecular Lines T=2,200-3,500K Red (Peaks in IR) Example: Betelgeuse, Proxima Centauri
22
Spectral Types L star Strong Molecular Lines Includes Water !! T=1,300-2,200 Red (Peaks in IR) Likely a Brown Dwarf
23
Spectral Types T star Strong Lines of Water and Methane Very Cool! T=900-1300K Red (Peaks in IR) Likely a Brown Dwarf
24
Spectral Types RNS Special classes for “evolved” stars These stars are in old age Puffy atmospheres wash out some lines Others are easier to see
25
Spectral Types Further divisions 0-9 Based on where temperature is in range Lower the number- hotter the star Sun is a G2 star, cooler than G1 hotter than G3
26
Why different spectra? Most stars have similar composition Line strength is determined by number of excited electrons What determines this? Temperature differences!
27
Combination of Tools Spectral Class, Temperature, and Luminosity can be put together Form a very useful tool Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagram Relates T, L, D, spectral class of any star! Very important to Astronomers!
28
HR Diagram Demographic Chart All stars are place on it based on two pieces information Luminosity and Temperature (spectral class) Can provide information about many things
29
HR Diagram Temperature Increasing Luminosity Increasing Cool, dimHot, dim Hot, bright Cool, bright
30
HR Diagram Temperature Increasing Luminosity Increasing Main Sequence Red Giants White Dwarfs Red Super Giants
31
Stellar Populations HR diagram gives information about populations Stars evolve and age Star’s position on HR diagram =info about age Not all stars in sky are same age! Also info about fusion fuel
32
Main Sequence Most stars Adult star Majority of lifetime spent here Hydrogen fusion Stay in one location on diagram Blue Supergiants to Red Dwarfs Sun is on MS
33
Red Giants Red Giants 10-1000x Radius of Sun (R ) 3000-6000K Red Giants are older than MS stars of same mass No Red Giants within 5pc of Sun 1% of Solar Neighborhood Stopped H-fusion
34
White Dwarfs Earth-sized (Tiny) Very hot (>6000K) Older than Red Giants No H-fusion 9% of Solar Neighborhood
35
Luminosity Classes Need more than Spectral Class Example : Both Betelgeuse and Barnard’s Star are M type stars Betelgeuse is 100,000 times more Luminous!
36
Luminosity Classes Assign LC to distinguish types of stars of same Spectral Class I Supergiants (Ia, Ib) II Luminous Giants III Regular Giants IV Subgiants V Main Sequence Stars
37
Luminosity Classes Betelgeuse is a M2Ia – Red, Supergiant Barnard’s Star M5V – Red Dwarf, Main Sequence
38
Distance Again Find distance to ANY star Measure energy received Estimate luminosity from classification Use inverse-square law to find distance Spectroscopic Distance
39
Stellar Masses Can’t be found from just “size” Two ways to determine Binary Star system Mass-Luminosity Relationship Determines star’s location on MS and ultimately… It’s lifespan!
40
Binary Star Masses Two stars orbiting a common center 3 types of Binary Stars Visual Binary Spectroscopic Binary Eclipsing Binary
41
Visual Binary See two stars w/ eye or telescope Example Alcor/Mizar in Big Dipper Widely separated Time of orbit can be observed directly Brighter Star-Primary Fainter Star-Secondary
42
Spectroscopic Binary Too closer together or too far away to see separate stars Look for Doppler Shift in Spectral Lines Moving toward us –Blue Shift Moving away from us –Red Shift
43
Spectroscopic Binary Double-line SB – Two stars about same Luminosity – Two sets of lines observed – Each is Doppler Shifted Single-line SB – One star is brighter than other – One set of lines observed – Doppler shifted also
44
Spectroscopic Binary Animation http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/lect/binaries/spectroscopic.html
45
Eclipsing Binaries Rarest form Orbital Plane is edge on One star passes in front of other Blocks light (eclipses!) “Star” appears to vary dramatically in brightness Check it out!Check it out! Example: Algol, Sirius AB
46
Finding Masses Determine the period of orbit Determine distance apart Find the “balance point” of system This is Center of Mass Use this to determine total mass of system Can’t find individual masses unless individual stars can be seen
47
Single Star Masses Binary techniques don’t work Mass-Luminosity relationship Larger Luminosity – Greater Mass Luminosity Mass 4 Example A star 2x Mass of Sun (M ) has a Luminosity 2 4 (16x) the Sun’s (L )
48
IMPORTANT! The Mass-Luminosity Relation applies to Main Sequence Stars only! Red Giants and White Dwarfs must use approximations
49
Mass-Luminosity Relation Range of Masses on MS is not very large 0.1M -100M Smaller than this-don’t “turn on” Larger than this –too unstable
50
Mass-Luminosity Relation Also, tells about lifetimes Big stars have more fuel but… They burn it much, much faster so… They live much shorter lifetimes than smaller stars 1M - 10 billion years 10M -20 million years
51
Mass-Luminosity Relation http://www.astronomynotes.com/starprop/s13.htm
52
Summary Spectral Classes tell about temperature (and color) Luminosity Classes tell about sizes HR diagram VERY IMPORTANT TOOL Luminosity – Radius –Temperature Mass -Luminosity
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.