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Chapter 11 Surveying the Stars

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Title: Chapter 11 Surveying the Stars


1
Chapter 11Surveying the Stars
2
11.1 Properties of Stars
  • Our Goals for Learning
  • How luminous are stars?
  • How hot are stars?
  • How massive are stars?

3
How luminous are stars?
4
The brightness of a star depends on both distance
and luminosity
5
Luminosity Amount of power a star radiates
(energy per secondWatts) Apparent brightness
Amount of starlight that reaches Earth (energy
per second per square meter)
6
Thought Question
  • These two stars have about the same luminosity --
    which one appears brighter?
  • A. Alpha Centauri
  • B. The Sun

7
Thought Question
  • These two stars have about the same luminosity --
    which one appears brighter?
  • A. Alpha Centauri
  • B. The Sun

8
Luminosity passing through each sphere is the
same Area of sphere 4p (radius)2 Divide
luminosity by area to get brightness
9
The relationship between apparent brightness
and luminosity depends on distance
Luminosity Brightness
4p (distance)2
We can determine a stars luminosity if we can
measure its distance and apparent brightness
Luminosity 4p (distance)2 x (Brightness)
10
Thought Question
  • How would the apparent brightness of Alpha
    Centauri change if it were three times farther
    away?
  • A. It would be only 1/3 as bright
  • B. It would be only 1/6 as bright
  • C. It would be only 1/9 as bright
  • D. It would be three times brighter

11
Thought Question
  • How would the apparent brightness of Alpha
    Centauri change if it were three times farther
    away?
  • A. It would be only 1/3 as bright
  • B. It would be only 1/6 as bright
  • C. It would be only 1/9 as bright
  • D. It would be three times brighter

12
How hot are stars?
13
Every object emits thermal radiation with a
spectrum that depends on its temperature
14
An object of fixed size grows more luminous as
its temperature rises
15
Laws of Thermal Radiation
1) Hotter objects emit more light at all
wavelengths 2) Hotter objects emit light at
shorter wavelengths and higher frequencies
16

Hottest stars 50,000 K Suns surface is
5,800 K Coolest stars 3,000 K
17
Level of ionization also reveals a stars
temperature
106 K
105 K
Ionized Gas (Plasma)
104 K
103 K
Neutral Gas
Molecules
102 K
10 K
Solid
18
Absorption lines in stars spectrum tell us
ionization level
19
Lines in a stars spectrum correspond to a
spectral type that reveals its temperature
(Hottest) O B A F G K M
(Coolest)
20
Remembering Spectral Types
(Hottest) O B A F G K M (Coolest)
  • Oh, Be A Fine Girl, Kiss Me

21
Thought Question
  • Which kind of star is hottest?
  • A. M star
  • B. F star
  • C. A star
  • D. K star

22
Thought Question
  • Which kind of star is hottest?
  • A. M star
  • B. F star
  • C. A star
  • D. K star

23
How massive are stars?
24
The orbit of a binary star system depends on
strength of gravity
25
Types of Binary Star Systems
  • Visual Binary
  • Eclipsing Binary
  • Spectroscopic Binary
  • Binary Star- double star system that orbit each
    other
  • About half of all stars are in binary systems

26
Visual Binary
We can directly observe the orbital motions of
these stars Visual Binary Orbit around each
other
27
Eclipsing Binary
Eclipsing Binary- Stars that eclipse each other
as they circle (Vary in Brightness)
28

Most massive stars 100 MSun Least
massive stars 0.08 MSun (MSun is the
mass of the Sun)
29
What have we learned?
  • How luminous are stars?
  • The apparent brightness of a star in our sky
    depends on both its luminosity the total amount
    of light it emits into spaceand its distance
    from Earth, as expressed by the inverse square
    law for light.

30
What have we learned?
  • How hot are stars?
  • The surface temperatures of the hottest stars
    exceed 40,000 K and those of the coolest stars
    are less than 3,000 K. We measure a stars
    surface temperature from its color or spectrum,
    and we classify spectra according to the sequence
    of spectral types OBAFGKM, which runs from
    hottest to coolest.

31
What have we learned?
  • How massive are stars?
  • The overall range of stellar masses runs from
    0.08 times the mass of the Sun to about 100 times
    the mass of the Sun.

32
11.2 Classifying Stars
  • Our Goals for Learning
  • How do we classify stars?
  • Why is a stars mass its most important property?
  • What is a HertzsprungRussell diagram?

33
How do we classify stars?
34

Most of the brightest stars are reddish in
color Color and luminosity are closely related
among the remaining normal stars
35

Main-sequence stars Normal stars like our sun
that are fusing hydrogen into helium in their
cores. Luminous main-sequence stars are hot
(blue) Less luminous ones are cooler (yellow or
red)
36

Why are some red stars so much more
luminous? Theyre bigger! Biggest red stars
1000 Rsun Smallest red stars 0.1
RSun
37
A stars full classification includes spectral
type (line identities) and luminosity class (line
shapes, related to the size of the star) I
- supergiant II - bright giant III -
giant IV - subgiant V - main
sequence Examples Sun - G2 V Sirius - A1
V Proxima Centauri - M5.5 V Betelgeuse - M2 I
38
Why is a stars mass its most important property?
39
Each stars properties depend mostly on mass and
age
40
Each stars properties depend mostly on mass and
age
41
Stellar Properties Review
Luminosity from brightness and
distance 10-4 LSun - 106 LSun Temperature
from color and spectral type 3,000 K -
50,000 K Mass from period (p) and average
separation (a) of binary-star orbit 0.08
MSun - 100 MSun
42
Stellar Properties Review
Luminosity from brightness and
distance 10-4 LSun - 106 LSun Temperature
from color and spectral type 3,000 K -
50,000 K Mass from period (p) and average
separation (a) of binary-star orbit 0.08
MSun - 100 MSun
(0.08 MSun)
(100 MSun)
(100 MSun)
(0.08 MSun)
43
Core pressure and temperature of a higher-mass
star are larger in order to balance
gravity Higher core temperature boosts fusion
rate, leading to larger luminosity
44
Mass Lifetime
Suns life expectancy 10 billion years
45
Mass Lifetime
Until core hydrogen (10 of total) is used up
Suns life expectancy 10 billion years
46
Mass Lifetime
Until core hydrogen (10 of total) is used up
Suns life expectancy 10 billion years Life
expectancy of 10 MSun star 10 times as much
fuel, uses it 104 times as fast 10 million
years 10 billion years x 10 / 104
47
Mass Lifetime
Until core hydrogen (10 of total) is used up
Suns life expectancy 10 billion years Life
expectancy of 10 MSun star 10 times as much
fuel, uses it 104 times as fast 10 million
years 10 billion years x 10 / 104 Life
expectancy of 0.1 MSun star 0.1 times as much
fuel, uses it 0.01 times as fast 100 billion
years 10 billion years x 0.1 / 0.01
48
Main-Sequence Star Summary
High Mass High Luminosity Short-Lived
Large Radius Blue Low Mass Low
Luminosity Long-Lived Small Radius Red
49
What is a Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram?
50
An H-R diagram- plots the luminosity and
temperature of stars
Luminosity
Temperature
51
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52
Main sequence- Normal hydrogen- burning stars
reside on the of the H-R diagram
53
Large radius
Stars with low temperature and high luminosity
must have large radius
Small radius
54
SUPERGIANTS
Stars with low temperature and high luminosity
must have large radius
GIANTS
55
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56
H-R diagram depicts Temperature Color
Spectral Type Luminosity Radius Mass
Lifespan Age
Luminosity
Temperature
57
C
B
Which star is the hottest?
D
Luminosity
A
Temperature
58
C
C
B
Which star is the hottest?
B
A
D
Luminosity
D
A
A
Temperature
59
C
B
Which star is the most luminous?
D
Luminosity
A
Temperature
60
C
B
Which star is the most luminous?
C
D
Luminosity
A
Temperature
61
C
B
Which star is a main-sequence star?
D
Luminosity
A
Temperature
62
C
B
Which star is a main-sequence star?
D
D
Luminosity
A
Temperature
63
C
B
Which star has the largest radius?
D
Luminosity
A
Temperature
64
C
B
Which star has the largest radius?
C
D
Luminosity
A
Temperature
65
A
Which star is most like our Sun?
D
Luminosity
B
C
Temperature
66
A
Which star is most like our Sun?
D
B
Luminosity
B
C
Temperature
67
A
Which of these stars will have changed the least
10 billion years from now?
D
Luminosity
B
C
Temperature
68
A
Which of these stars will have changed the least
10 billion years from now?
D
Luminosity
B
C
C
Temperature
69
A
Which of these stars can be no more than 10
million years old?
D
Luminosity
B
C
Temperature
70
A
Which of these stars can be no more than 10
million years old?
D
A
Luminosity
B
C
Temperature
71
What have we learned?
  • How do we classify stars?
  • We classify stars according to their spectral
    type and luminosity class.
  • The spectral type tells us the stars surface
    temperature
  • The luminosity class how much light it puts out.
  • Why is a stars mass its most important
    property?
  • A stars mass at birth determines virtually
    everything that happens to it throughout its
    life.

72
What have we learned?
  • What is a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram?
  • An HR diagram plots stars according to their
    surface temperatures and luminosities.

73
11.3 Star Clusters
  • Our Goals for Learning
  • What are the two types of star clusters?
  • How do we measure the age of a star cluster?

74
What are the two types of star clusters?
75
Open cluster A few thousand loosely packed
stars
76
Globular cluster Up to a million or more stars
in a dense ball bound together by gravity
77
How do we measure the age of a star cluster?
78
Massive blue stars die first, followed by white,
yellow, orange, and red stars
79
Pleiades now has no stars with life expectancy
less than around 100 million years
Main-sequence turnoff
80
Main-sequence turnoff point of a cluster tells us
its age
81
To determine accurate ages, we compare models of
stellar evolution to the cluster data
82
Detailed modeling of the oldest globular clusters
reveals that they are about 13 billion years old
83
What have we learned?
  • What are the two types of star clusters?
  • Open clusters contain up to several thousand
    stars and are found in the disk of the galaxy.
  • Globular clusters contain hundreds of thousands
    of stars, all closely packed together. They are
    found mainly in the halo of the galaxy.

84
What have we learned?
  • How do we measure the age of a star cluster?
  • Because all of a clusters stars we born at the
    same time, we can measure a clusters age by
    finding the main sequence turnoff point on an HR
    diagram of its stars. The clusters age is equal
    to the hydrogen-burning lifetime of the hottest,
    most luminous stars that remain on the main
    sequence.
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