Title: Analyzing Starlight
1Analyzing Starlight
2Image of stars in the direction of the center of
the Milky Way Galaxy, taken by the Hubble Space
Telescope How do the stars appear different?
3Not All Stars are Alike
- Stars appear different in
- brightness, from very bright to very faint
- color, from red to blue-white
- size
- A good constellation for seeing star colors in
the winter sky is Orion (the
hunter) - Betelgeuse, a red super-
giant star - Rigel, a blue super-giant
star
4Betelgeuse
5Brightness of Stars (1)
- The total amount of energy at all wavelengths
that a star emits is called its luminosity - Note this is how much energy the star gives off
each second, NOT how much energy ultimately
reaches our eyes or telescope - The luminosity of a star is perhaps its most
important characteristic - The amount of a stars energy that actually
reaches a given area each second here on Earth is
called the stars apparent brightness - If all stars had the same
luminosity, their apparent
brightnesses would tell us
how far they
are from us - The inverse-square law of
light propagation the apparent
brightness of a light source decreases as the
square of the distance from it
6Brightness of Stars (2)
- The inverse-square law
implies that - a star will appear 4 times
fainter if an observers
distance from it is
doubled, 9 times fainter
if the
distance is tripled,
etc. - In reality, stars generally
do not have the same
luminosity - In other words, they are
not standard bulbs - Consequently, distance
is the among the most
difficult quantities to measure in astronomy
7Stars Apparent Magnitudes (1)
- A stars apparent brightness is described using
the magnitude system - The system was devised by the Greek astronomer
Hipparchus around 150 B.C. - He put the brightest stars into the
first-magnitude class, the next brightest stars
into second-magnitude class, and so on, until he
had all of the visible stars grouped into six
magnitude classes - Examples a star of the 1st magnitude appears 2.5
times brighter than a star of the 2nd magnitude,
whereas a star of the 2nd magnitude appears 40
times brighter than a star of the 6th magnitude
8Stars Apparent Magnitudes (2)
- Thus, the smaller the magnitude, the brighter the
object being observed! - The old magnitude-system was based on how bright
a star appeared to the unaided eye - Todays magnitude system (based on more accurate
measurements) goes beyond Hipparchus' original
range of magnitudes 1 through 6 - Very bright objects can have a magnitude of 0, or
even a negative number - Very faint objects have magnitudes greater than
10
9Stars Colors and Temperatures
- A star is a ball of dense, hot gas that emits a
continuous spectrum of radiation - The spectrum is very similar to that of radiation
emitted by a blackbody - The most intense color of a star is related to
its surface temperature by Wiens law - The higher the temperature, the shorter the
wavelength of the most intense color - Thus
- Blue colors dominate the light output of very hot
stars - Cool stars emit most of their visible radiation
at red wavelengths - Our Suns surface temperature is about 6,000 K,
with the dominant color being a slightly greenish
yellow - Hottest stars can have surface temperatures of
100,000 K, whereas coolest stars have surface
temperatures of about 2,000 K
10Stars Color ? Temperature
11Determining Stars Temperature
- To determine the exact color of a star,
astronomers usually observe its brightness
through filters - A filter allows only a
narrow range of
wavelengths (colors)
to pass through - Two commonly used
filters are - a blue (B) filter that
lets through
only a
narrow band of blue
wavelengths - a visual (V) filter
that lets
through only colors around the green-yellow band - The colored light transmitted by each filter has
its own brightness, usually expressed in
magnitudes - The relative brightness of the transmitted colors
can tell if the star is hot, warm, or cool
12B-V Color Index
- A B-V color index is defined as the difference
in
magnitude between the B and V bands - A hot star has an
index of around 0
or a negative
number, while a
cool star has an
index close to 2.0 - Other stars are
somewhere in
between
13Spectra of Stars
- To analyze starlight, one can also use
spectroscopy, instead of filters - In general, the spectra of different stars look
different - The primary reason is that stars have different
temperatures - Most stars are very similar in composition to the
Sun - Hydrogen is the most abundant element in stars
- In the hottest stars, the hydrogen atoms are
completely ionized (no longer have their
electrons attached) due to the high temperature
and, consequently, they cannot produce hydrogen
absorption lines in the spectra - In the coolest stars, the hydrogen atoms are all
in lowest state and, consequently, hydrogen
transitions that can occur do not produce
absorption lines in the visible spectrum - Only stars with intermediate surface temperatures
(not too hot, not too cool about 10,000 K) have
spectra with hydrogen lines
14How Absorption Line is Produced
15Spectral Classes
- Astronomers sort stars according to the patterns
of lines seen in their spectra into seven
principal spectral classes - From hottest to coldest, the classes are
designated O, B, A, F, G, K, and M
G
K
M
O
B
A
F
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17Spectral Classes L and T
- Since 1995, astronomers have discovered objects
cooler than those in class M, but they are not
considered true stars because they are not
massive enough - Objects with masses less than 7.2 of or our
Suns mass (0.072 MSun) are not expected to
become hot enough for the nuclear fusion to take
place - Those objects are called brown dwarfs
- They are very faint and cool, emitting radiation
in the infrared part of the spectrum - The warmer brown dwarfs are assign to spectral
class L, and the cooler ones to spectral class T
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19Spectra of Stars in Different Spectral Classes
20Doppler Effect in Sound Waves
- Case (a)
- The source is moving towards observer A
- Observer A sees a compressed wave, and hence a
shorter wavelength (or a higher frequency) - Observer B sees a stretched wave, and hence a
longer wavelength (or a lower frequency) - Case (b)
- The source is stationary
- Observers A and B both see same wavelength
21Doppler Effect in Starlight
- The motion of a star causes its spectral lines to
shift positions - The shift depends on its speed and direction of
motion - If the star is moving toward us, the wavelengths
of its light get shorter - Its spectral lines are shifted toward the
shorter-wavelength (bluer) end of the spectrum - This is, therefore, called a blueshift
- If the star is moving away
from us, the wavelengths of
its light get
longer - Its spectral lines are shifted
toward the
longer-wavelength
(redder) end of the visible
spectrum - This is, thus, called a redshift
22Doppler Effect in Stellar Spectra
- The Doppler effect doesnt affect the overall
color of an object, unless it is moving at a
significant fraction of the speed of light (VERY
fast!) - For an object moving toward us, the red colors
will be shifted to the orange and the
near-infrared will be shifted to the red, etc. - All of the colors shift
- The overall color of the object depends on the
combined intensities of all of the wavelengths
(colors)
23The Suns Spectral Shifts
- The Suns spectra at 3 speeds (0, 0.01c, 0.1c)
- The hydrogen-alpha line (at 656.3nm) is shown
- The Doppler-shifted continuous spectrum of the
Sun moving at 0.01c is almost indistinguishable
from that of the Sun
being at rest
24Doppler Shift of Spectral Lines
- The Doppler shift of spectral lines is measurable
even for slow speed - Astronomers can detect spectral-line Doppler
shifts for speeds as small
as 1Â km/sec or
lower (less than
3.3?10-6 c)
25Doppler Effect in Stellar Rotation The
broadening of spectral lines indicates that the
star is rotating The greater the broadening, the
greater the speed of rotation