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STELLAR PROPERTIES

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STELLAR PROPERTIES How do we know what we know about stars? (and the rest of the universe!) What do YOU want to know about a random star? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: STELLAR PROPERTIES


1
STELLAR PROPERTIES
  • How do we know what we know about stars?
    (and the rest of the universe!)

2
What do YOU want to know about a random star?
  • What are the most IMPORTANT stellar properties?
  • Mass (always quoted in terms of
    M? 2 x 1033 g 2 x 1030
    kg) is MOST IMPORTANT
  • Age is VERY IMPORTANT
  • Composition (relative amounts of different
    elements) is also VERY IMPORTANT
  • Rotation velocity
  • Magnetic field
  • Together the above DETERMINE the ALL other
    properties of all stars, but NONE of them is EASY
    to determine.

3
Pop Quiz 2
  • Take out a piece of paper and PRINT your name
    neatly in the upper right corner (1)
  • Draw a cut-away diagram of the sun, labelling
    at least 3 interior and 3 atmospheric zones. (8)
  • What are the mass and luminosity of the sun? (2)

4
What are the (relatively) EASY TO DETERMINE
stellar properties?
  • Location on the sky, (RA, dec) (first thing you
    do!)
  • Brightness or Intensity, I (via apparent
    magnitude, m)
  • Surface temperature, T (via Wein's Law
    spectroscopy)
  • Distance, d (via parallax other methods
    discussed later)
  • Luminosity, L, or Power (via absolute magnitude,
    M)
  • Size or radius (from T and L via Stefan-Boltzmann
    Law)
  • Velocity, V (radial via Doppler shift motion
    across sky)
  • Multiplicity (single, binarydouble, triple
    etc.)
  • Do they have planets? very hard, but now
    sometimes possible to tell

5
Distances (d) via Parallax
  • This is a direct measurement of the apparent
    location of the star with respect to more distant
    stars. The closer a star
    is the more its apparent position shifts as the
    earth moves around the Sun.
    Our slightly differing vantage
    point at different times of the year causes this
    apparent motion
  • The parallax angle, p, is defined as the angle
    subtended by the Sun-Earth distance (1 AU) at the
    location of the star. It is geometrically equal
    to 1/2 of the shift in location over a six-month
    period.

6
The brightness of a star depends on both distance
and luminosity
7
Parallax Hipparcos
8
Parallax Applets
  • Introduction to Parallax Applet
  • Measuring Parallax Angle
  • Parallax Angle vs Distance
  • Parallax of Nearby Star

9
Parallax math
  • Parallax angle p ? tan p 1 AU / d
  • Biggest observed p 0.75 arcsec -- very small!
  • If d is in PARSECS, p'' 1/d
  • 1 parsec 1 pc 3.26 light-years
    3.085678 x 1018cm 3.1 x 1016 m 3.1 x 1013
    km
  • Recall, 1 AU 1.496 x 1013 cm 1.5 x 1011 m
    1.5x108 km
  • Example 1 closest star has p 0.75'' so
  • The distance, d (pc) 1/0.75'' 1.3 pc 4.1
    lt-yr
  • Example 2 A star has d 50 pc. What is p?
  • Parallax, p 1/d 1/50 0.02 arcsec 0.02''

10
The Nearest Stars
11
What are some good examples of parallax?
  • A) Hold your thumb out and blink your eyes. Your
    thumb moves more than the background
  • B) Driving down a road a nearby fence appears to
    shift more than distance scenery
  • C) Planets shift their position in the sky partly
    because the earth moves, shifting our position
  • D) Stars shift their position at different times
    of the year, as Earth orbits the Sun
  • E) All of the above

12
What are some good examples of parallax?
  • A) Hold your thumb out and blink your eyes. Your
    thumb moves more than the background
  • B) Driving down a road a nearby fence appears to
    shift more than distance scenery
  • C) Planets shift their position in the sky partly
    because the earth moves, shifting our position
  • D) Stars shift their position at different times
    of the year, as Earth orbits the Sun
  • E) All of the above

13
Luminosity Amount of power a star radiates
(energy per second Watts 107 erg s-1)
Apparent brightness Amount of starlight
that reaches Earth (energy per second per
square meterW m-2)
14
Luminosity passing through each sphere is the
same Area of sphere 4p
(radius)2 Divide luminosity by area to get
brightness
15
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)
16
BRIGHTNESS, LUMINOSITY AND MAGNITUDES
  • Apparent magnitude is an historical way of
    describing the brightness or intensity of a star
    or planet. The brightest objects visible to
    the naked eye were called 1st magnitude and the
    faintest, 6th magnitude.
  • Quantified to say a factor of 100 in brightness
    (or intensity -- erg/s/cm2) corresponds to
    exactly 5 mag.
  • ?m 5 ?100 times brighter (e.g., m 1 vs m 6)
  • ?m 1 ? (100)1/5 2.512 times brighter
  • ?m 2 ? (100)2/5 2.5122 6.31 times brighter
  • ?m 3 ? (100)3/5 2.5123 15.85 times brighter
  • ?m 10 ? 100 x 100 104 times brighter
  • ?m 15 ? 100 x 100 x 100 106 times brighter

17
Absolute Magnitudes and The Inverse Square Law
  • The absolute magnitude is a measure of the POWER
    or LUMINOSITY of a star.

We can measure apparent magnitude or INTENSITIES
easily and DISTANCES pretty easily, and so
determine absolute magnitudes or LUMINOSITIES
18
If a star was moved four times as far away, what
would happen to it?
  • A) It would get four times fainter
  • B) It would get sixteen times fainter
  • C) It would get fainter and redder
  • D) It would get fainter and bluer
  • E) If moved only four times farther, you wouldnt
    notice much change

19
If a star was moved four times as far away, what
would happen to it?
  • A) It would get four times as faint
  • B) It would get sixteen times fainter
  • C) It would get fainter and redder
  • D) It would get fainter and bluer
  • E) If moved only four times farther, you wouldnt
    notice much change

20
To measure a stars true brightness, or
luminosity, you need to know
  • A) Its temperature and distance
  • B) Its temperature and color
  • C) Its apparent brightness and distance
  • D) Its apparent brightness and color
  • E) Its distance, apparent brightness, and color
    or temperature

21
To measure a stars true brightness, or
luminosity, you need to know
  • A) Its temperature and distance
  • B) Its temperature and color
  • C) Its apparent brightness and distance
  • D) Its apparent brightness and color
  • E) Its distance, apparent brightness, and color
    or temperature

22
MAGNITUDES AND DISTANCES
  • Measuring the brightness, or apparent magnitude
    of a star is easy.
    If we also know the
    distance we can get the ACTUAL luminosity, or
    absolute magnitude. Alternatively, if we know
    both the APPARENT and ABSOLUTE magnitudes we can
    find the DISTANCE to a star.
  • The absolute magnitude can often be accurately
    estimated from the star's spectrum, so this
    method of distance determination (spectroscopic
    parallax) is often used beyond 100 pc where
    regular (trigonometric) parallax cant be
    accurately found.
  • A more distant but very luminous star can appear
    as bright as a nearer, fainter, star.

23
Different distances, same brightnesses
24
Review of Logs (common, base 10)
  • log10 10 1.0 log 1
    0.0 log 100 2.0
    log 1000 3.0 log 100,000
    5.0
  • log 0.1 -1.0 log 0.0001
    -4.0
  • log 2 0.30 log 3
    0.48 log 5 0.70
  • log 30 1.48 log 500
    2.70
  • log 0.5 -0.30 log 0.2
    -0.70
  • Simple rule log10(10x) x
  • Very useful since log(xy) log x log y

25
Mathematics of Magnitudes
  • EXAMPLES Given m 7 and d 100 pc, find M
    M m - 5 log (d/10pc)
  • M 7 - 5 log(100pc/10pc) 7 - 5 log
    10
  • so M 7 - 5(1) 2
  • What if m 18 and d 105 pc?
  • M m - 5 log (d/10pc)
  • M 18 - 5 log(105 pc / 101 pc) 18 - 5 log
    (104)
  • or M 18 - 5(4) -2

26
Apparent Magnitudes
Note that mags are backwards More negative is
Brighter and More positive is Fainter!
27
Getting Distances from Magnitudes
  • Now, given M -3 and m 7, find d.
  • m - M 5 log (d/10 pc)
    7 -(-3) 10 5 log
    (d/10 pc)
  • So 2 log (d/10pc)
  • Therefore 102 d/10 pc and finally,
  • d 102(10 pc) 103 pc 1000 pc

28
COLORS and TEMPERATURES of STARS
  • Bluer stars are hotter and redder ones are
    cooler.
  • The simplest and quickest way to estimate the
    temperature is to measure the magnitudes of stars
    in different COLORS, using FILTERS on a telescope
    that only let particular wavelengths through --
    the technique of FILTER PHOTOMETRY.
  • Standard filters are U, B, V, R, I
    with U UV
    (really very blue), B blue, V visible (really
    yellow), R red, and I IR (very long red).
  • Filters actually in the IR are H, K, L and can be
    used with telescopes in space or at very high
    altitudes.
  • Color index, C B - V
  • Since lower magnitudes are brighter, C -0.4 is
    hot (i.e., more blue light than yellow) and C
    1.2 is cold (vice versa) for a star.

29
Stellar Colors
Cool, red, Betelgeuse Hot, blue, Rigel Dense
star field
30
Blackbody Curves Filter Photometry
  1. B-V lt 0, hot and blue
  2. B-V 0, medium and yellow
  3. B-V gt 0, cool and red

31
Stellar Temperatures
  • Better TEMPERATURE measurements can be obtained
    with more work from a SPECTROMETER, where
    brightnesses at many, many wavelengths are
    determined.
    But you must look at the
    star for a longer period, since all the light is
    spread out into many wavelength bins.
  • This allows finding ?max, therefore T via Wien's
    Law T(K) 0.29 cm?K/ ?max (cm)
  • Even more precise measurements of T come from a
    detailed analysis of the strengths of many
    spectral absorption lines.
  • Wien's Law Applet

32
STELLAR SIZES
  • A very small number of nearby and large stars
    have had their radii directly determined by
    INTERFEROMETRY. The CHARA Array is substantially
    adding to this number.
  • Usually we must use the STEFAN-BOLTZMAN LAW.
  • L 4 ? ? R2 T4
  • L is found from M via m and d
  • T is found from color index, Wiens Law, or
    spectroscopy
  • So we solve for R,

33
Stars Come in a WIDE Range of Sizes
34
SPECTRAL LINES TELL US
  • Composition (mere presence of absorption lines
    say which elements are present in the star's
    photosphere -- fingerprints)
  • Abundances (relative strengths of lines)
  • Temperature (relative strengths of lines)
    (equations are solved simultaneously for T and
    abundances)
  • Pressure (higher P makes for broader lines)
  • Rotation (faster spin makes for broader lines)
    (rotationally broadened line shapes are slightly
    different from those produced by pressure
    broadening)
  • Velocity (radial velocity from Doppler shift)
  • Magnetic field strength (causes splitting of
    energy levels within atoms, therefore splitting
    of spectral lines -- but only visible if B is
    higher than is typical for most stars).

35
STELLAR MOTION and VELOCITY
  • The radial, or line-of-sight, velocity can be
    determined from the Doppler shift, as already
    discussed.
  • Long-term measurements of nearby stars (when
    determining parallaxes for distance measurements)
    also showed many exhibited enough PROPER MOTION
    to be detected.
    This is motion in the plane of the sky (i.e.
    in Right Ascension and Declination)
  • PM is measured in "/year BUT actual TRANSVERSE
    VELOCITY PM x d
  • The SPACE VELOCITY is the full 3-D velocity of a
    star
    the VECTOR SUM of
    the Radial and Transverse Velocities.

36
Proper and Space Motions
Barnards Star ?
37
IDEA QUIZ
  • Star A has M-3 and d100 pc
  • Star B has m6 and d1000 pc
  • Star C has m3 and M3
  • Which star is
  • 1) Most luminous (most powerful)
  • 2) Brightest (most intense)
  • 3) Closest
  • Remember m-M 5 log(d/10pc)

38
Answers
  • B Mm-5log(1000/10)6-5log(100)
  • 6-5(2)6-10-4 most luminous
  • A mM5log(d/10pc)
  • -35log(100/10)-35(1)2 brightest
  • C 5log(d/10pc)m-M0,
  • So log(d/10pc)0 and d10pc closest
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