Title: General GeoAstro II: Astronomy
1General GeoAstro II Astronomy
- The name of the game
- Not all info on slides attend the lectures, take
notes ! - sugg. reading - Universe (Kaufmann
Freedman) basic reference - - Astronomy-fun,
animations etc -
http//www.opencourse.info/astronomy/introduction/
-
astronomy_links.html - - more advanced
-
http//ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Physics/8282JSpring2003/
-
StudyMaterials/index.htm - no laptops, no mobiles during class
- classes are not complicated, but please repeat
them regularly - only few formulae, but you have to
know/understand them - Statistics from previous years attendance good
grade -
- Preparing the night before exam will
not work ! - http//www.faculty.iu-bremen/course/spring06/Gener
alGeoAstro2/astro
2General GeoAstro II Astronomy
- Stars
- Nature of stars
- Birth of stars
- Stellar evolution
- Endpoints
- White Dwarfs
- Neutron Stars
- Black Holes
- Galaxies
- - Milky Way
- - Other galaxies
- - Supermassive
- black holes
3Distance to the stars
- From brightness? No!
- Parallax-experiment
- full circle 360 deg
- 1 deg 60 arcmin
- 60 '
- 6060 arcsec
- 3600 ''
- Stellar parallax
d 1/p
4 Distance to the stars
- Definition star has a distance of 1 parsec
(pc) if - its parallax is
one arcsecond - 1 pc 3.26 light years
- Brightest stars on the night sky too far to
measure parallax - Blurring of atmosphere parallaxes lt 0.01 arcsec
extremely hard to measure, reliable out to - d 1/p 1/0.01 100 pc
5 Distance to the stars
- Hipparcos High Precision Parallax Collecting
Satellite - (Hipparchus greek astronomer)
- Parallaxes still important to gauge other
distance indicators
6 Stellar velocities
- Important tool Doppler shift
- in words
- formula (l-lo) / lo vr/c
- vr radial motion
-
-
-
7Stellar velocities
- Proper motion m Which angle is travelled per
time? - Radial motion vr measured via Doppler-shift
- True velocity
8Brightness and Distance (Inverse
square law)
- Distance and brightness
luminosity - Stars have different masses
- different luminosities
- luminosity energy/time J/s
- brightness energy/(time surface area) J/s
m2
9Brightness and distance
10 luminosities
- huge variety of stellar luminosities
- Lmax 1010 Lmin
- (1010 number of all people that ever lived
on earth)
11The Magnitude system
- System to classify stellar brightness
- Very old Hipparchus (200 B.C.)
- brightest stars first magnitude
- half as bright second magnitude
- half as bright third magnitude
- apparent magnitudes
- Attention scale backwards
12 Magnitude system
- 19th century astronomers first magnitude stars
shall be 100 times brighter than sixth magnitude
stars - difference of 5 mag corresponds to a
- factor of 100 in brightness,
-
- i.e. x5 100 x
2.512 -
- half as bright
1/2.512 as bright
13 Magnitude
system
- Scales backwards the brighter the more
- negative
- Examples
- Venus m - 4
- Full moon m - 13
- Our sun m - 26.8
- Relation brightness magnitudes...
- m2-m1 2.5 log(b1/b2)
14Absolute magnitudes
- Definition absolute mag. relative mag. as seen
from a distance of 10 pc - Distance modulus (m-M)
- m - M 5 log(dpc) 5
- dpc distance in pc
-
m apparent magnitude -
M absolute magnitude
15Stellar colours
- Stellar colours depend
- on the surface temperature !
- Wiens law ?max T const
16For your information
- Geo-Astro helpdesk
- Tuesday 1900 2100, East Hall 5
- 1st session February 14th
-
17Spectra of stars
- How do we know the same laws of physics hold in
the observable universe? - Sun absorption line spectrum (continuum dark
lines) - Spectral classification O B A F G K M
- Oh be a fine girl/guy kiss me
-
- hot Tsurf 25 000 K
-
Sun - cool Tsurf 3000 K
18 Spectra of
Stars
- Quantum mechanics
- Interpretation of absorption lines in terms
of atomic energy levels
19 Stefan-Boltzmann law for black body radiation
- F s T4
- - F energy flux from star,
- Joules per
square meter per second - - s a constant
(Stefan-Boltzmann constant) - - T temperature
- Luminosity of a star L 4pR2 s T4
20Stellar sizes
- impossible to measure with telescopes
- measure i) brightness
- ii) distance (parallax)
- iii) surface temperature
(spectral type) - .
-
- .
21Hertzsprung-Russel diagram
- Idea plot luminosity vs. temperature
-
(spectral type)
22 Hertzpsrung-Russel diagram
- not random, just a few classes
- most stars on Main Sequence (hydrogen burning)
- White dwarfs same temperature, but lower
- luminosity
small radius - RWD 10 000 km
Rearth - Giants same temperature, but higher
- luminosity
large radius - Rgiant 10 - 100
Rsun -
Tsurf 3000 6000 K - Supergiants up to 1000 Rsun
23Stellar Masses
- need binary stars ! (50 of all stars in
binaries) - double stars either i) optical double
stars -
-
ii) true binary star - How to get masses???
- Kepler III ????G??M1M2)/a3
-
M1 mass star 1 - M2 mass star
2 -
a separation between stars -
G gravitational constant -
? 2 ?/T, T orbital period - measure a and T total system
mass
24 Stellar
masses
- individual masses?
- i) find center of mass (CM)
- ii) distances from CM to stars, a1
a2 - a1 (M2/Mtot) a
- a2 (M1/Mtot) a
25Mass-luminosity relation
- Observation
- L
M3.5 .. -
proportional to -
- Stellar lifetime??????????????????????????????
- fat blokes die young
-
26The Birth of Stars
- We see a region of space extending from the
centre of the sun to unknown distances contained
between two planes not far from each other - (Immanuel Kant Allgemeine Naturgeschichte
und Theorie des Himmels) - Nuclear burning in the sun (hydrogen to
helium) - consumes 6 1011 kg/s of hydrogen
- no infinite fuel resources finite life time
-
- stellar evolution (birth,
evolution, death)
27Birth of Stars
- snapshot problematic
-
- stellar gtgt human lifetime
- Derive evolutionary sequence from a set of
snapshots
28Stellar Birth
- Stars are born in the
- gravitational collapse of
- giant molecular clouds
29Stellar Birth
- computer-simulation of
- the collapse of a giant
- molecular cloud by
- Mathew Bate
- very dynamic process
- stars form in groups
- many binary/multiple
- star systems form
- observation
- 50 of stars are in
- binary systems
30Stellar birth
- Where does star formation take place?
- in the spiral arms of galaxies
31Interstellar Medium (ISM)
- ISM provides matter of which stars are made
- ISM consists of a combination of gas and dust
- Interstellar
gas - Very low density 1 H atom/ccm (air
1019 atoms/cm3 ) - but still 20-30 of mass of galaxy
- mainly Hydrogen Helium, mixed with cosmic rays,
magnetic fields and radiation
32Interstellar medium
- Interstellar dust
- - mainly H,C,O,Mg and Fe
- - size lt 1/1000 mm
- wavelength blue light
- blue scattered in all
directions, - intensity reduced
- interstellar reddening
- - also absorbs light, heats up, emits
infrared radiation - insterstellar extinction
33Interstellar medium
- For historical reasons interstellar clouds are
called - Nebulae
- Three kinds of nebulae
- Emission N. Reflection N.
Dark N.
34Interstellar medium
- Emission nebulae
- - contain hot, young stars
- (O and B stars with Tsurf gt 10
000K) - - temperatures 10 000 K
- - masses 10 10 000 Msolar
- - density n few 1000 atoms/cm3
- (compare with air 1019 atoms/cm3
-
ISM 1 atom/cm3) -
35Interstellar medium emission nebulae
- Interstellar hydrogen found in two forms
- HI-region neutral hydrogen
- HII-region ionized hydrogen (i.e. protons
-
and
electrons)
36Interstellar medium emission nebulae
- Emission mechanism HII-region
- - Hydrogen ionized by
- UV-radiation from hot stars
- - recombination
- (proton captures electron, emits light
- as it cascades down)
- - most important transition
- from n3 to n2 (Ha-photons)
- reddish colour
37Reflection nebulae
- Lots of fine-grained dust, low density
- reflects short-wavelengths more
- efficiently than long ones
- blue colour
-
38Dark Nebulae
- High density of dust grains
- block view to the stars
- Temperature 10 100 K
- hydrogen molecules
- Density n 104 109 atoms/cm3
39Stellar Evolution
- Protostars
- Gravity has to overcome gas pressure
- dense cold regions preferred
- dark nebulae (stellar nurseries)
- standard cosmic abundances
- 75 Hydrogen
- 24 Helium
- 1 heavier elements
40Protostars
- young protostars more luminous than later on the
main sequence (gravitational energy) - Decrease of luminosity at almost constant surface
temperature, - but central temperature
- rises
- Evolutionary path in
- HR-diagram
41Protostars
- At Tcentral 106 K thermonuclear reactions
- (H He)
set in - produce
energy/pressure - stop
contraction - hydrostatic equilibriumnuclear burning
- Main sequence (MS) reached
- Exact position on MS determined by stellar mass
42Main sequence masses
- Extreme cases
- Mass too small (lt0.08 Msol)
- no ignition of hydrogen, no main sequence
stage - Brown Dwarf
- Mass too big (gt100 Msol)
- violent winds
- disruption of the star
- Main sequence 0.08 lt MMS lt 100 Msol
43Young stellar objects (YSOs)
44Young stellar objects
- examples of accretion disk jet connection
- interaction of these outflows with surrounding
matter - Herbig-Haro objects
- Jets are usually short-lived 104 years,but can
eject large masses (1 Msol) during this
time - many young stars lose mass
- via strong winds mass loss 10-7 Msol/year
- (our sun 10-14 Msol/year)
- Example gas ejection from XZ-Tauri
45Young stellar objects
- young stars like to hang around in groups
- (see previous movie)
- open clusters
- fastest stars may leave
- evaporation of open
clusters
46Stellar evolution overview
- once formed, evolution of stars depends on their
masses - M lt 0.08 Msol no nuclear fusion
- Brown
dwarfs - 0.08 lt M lt 8 Msol i) Main sequence
- ii) Giant
phase - iii) White
Dwarf -
planetary nebula
47Stellar evolution overview
- 8 lt M lt 25 Msol i) Main Sequence
- ii) Giant
phase - iii)
supernova -
explosion - neutron star
- M gt 25 Msol i) Main Sequence
- ii) Giant
phase - iii)
supernova -
explosion - black hole
48Evolution of a M lt 8 Msol star
- our sun - MS-star, H-burning in core
- - Red Giant H
in core - exhausted,
H-burning in - shell
- - Red GiantHe
ignites in - stellar
core, radius 1 AU -
earth swallowed - (
5 109 years from now) - - final
stages hot, cooling -
Carbon-Oxygen core, -
eject envelope -
- White
dwarf planetary nebula
498 Msol -star
508 Msol -star
- Evolution in the HR-diagram
51Testing stellar evolutionGlobular Clusters
- Globular Clusters
- 105 stars
- in halo of galaxy
- Old about same age as
- galaxy
-
-
52Globular clusters and HR-diagrams
- Basic idea - formed at the same time
- - heaviest
stars have already evolved away from - main
sequence - - lightest stars
still on main sequence -
age of cluster
53Evolution for M gt 8 Msol
- Stages
- Main sequence
- Giant stage
- Final stage
54Evolution for M gt 8 Msol
- No more nuclear fuel (beyond iron)
- core-collapse
- supernova explosion (type II)
55Evolution for M gt 8 Msol
- Supernova explosion results in
- either
- i) a neutron star (M lt 25 Msol)
- or
- ii) a black hole (M gt 25 Msol)
56End stages of stellar evolution
- White dwarfs
- Left behind in center of planetary nebula
- No more nuclear burning just cools
until it fades away - Masses 0.2 1.4 Msol
- above 1.4 Msol
collapse to neutron star - Densities 106 108 g/cm3 (earth 5
g/cm3) - Equilibrium between gravity and degeneracy
pressure
57White dwarfs
- Degeneracy pressure
- purely quantum mechanical effect
- Electrons are Fermions (spin ½)
- dont want to be in the same state
- (Pauli-exclusion principle)
- resist compression even at zero temperature
- all mass from neutrons and protons
- all pressure from electrons
58white dwarfs
- Mass-Radius relationship R M -1/3
- More massive WDs are smaller
-
59End Stages of stellar evolution
Neutron Stars
- Masses 1.4 Msol
- Radius 10 - 15 km
- Density few 1014 g/cm3
-
observed neutron star mass
distribution - Magnetic field 1012 - 1015 G (earth 0.5 G)
60Neutron stars
- hard to detect
- new-born neutron
- star in Supernova
- remnant
61Neutron Stars
- Internal structure
- mostly neutrons
- (90 neutrons, 10 protons)
- crust iron-like
- nuclei
- center exotic
- particles?
62End Stages of stellar evolution
Black holes
- neutron star has limiting mass, above that mass
collapse to a black hole - not even light can escape from a black hole
- How can a black hole be detected?
63Black holes
- Black hole accretes mass from
- companion star
-
- X-ray binary
64Further reading
- KaufmanFreedman Universe, part III
- http//observe.arc.nasa.gov/nasa/space/stellardea
th/stellardeath_intro.html - very simple, still interesting
- http//chandra.harvard.edu/edu/formal/stellar_ev/
- good overview
- http//www-ssg.sr.unh.edu/ism/links.html,
- good collection of links