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ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy Properties of Stars Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections 0101-0106.

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Presentation on theme: "ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy Properties of Stars Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections 0101-0106."— Presentation transcript:

1 ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy Properties of Stars Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections 0101-0106

2

3 How do we measure stellar luminosities?

4 The brightness of a star depends on both distance and luminosity.

5 Luminosity: Amount of power a star radiates. (Energy per second, or Watts.) 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 to us? A.Alpha Centauri. B.The Sun.

7 Thought Question These two stars have about the same luminosity. Which one appears brighter to us? A.Alpha Centauri. B.The Sun.

8 Luminosity passing through each sphere is the same. Area of sphere: 4 (radius) 2 Divide luminosity by area to get brightness.

9 The relationship between apparent brightness and luminosity depends on distance… We can determine a star’s luminosity if we can measure its distance and apparent brightness… Measuring Luminosity

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 So how far away are these stars?

13 Parallax is the apparent shift in position of a nearby object against a background of more distant objects.

14 Parallax is measured by comparing snapshots taken at different times and measuring the shift in angle to the star.

15 Apparent positions of nearest stars shift by about an arcsecond as Earth orbits the Sun.

16 The farther the distance, the smaller the angle.

17 Parallax and Distance

18 Most luminous stars: 10 6 L Sun. Least luminous stars: 10 -4 L Sun. (L Sun is the luminosity of the Sun.)

19 The Magnitude Scale

20 How do we measure stellar temperatures?

21 Recall: every object emits thermal radiation with a spectrum that depends on its temperature.

22 An object of fixed size grows more luminous as its temperature rises. Relationship Between Temperature and Luminosity

23 Properties of Thermal Radiation 1.Hotter objects emit more light per unit area at all wavelengths (more luminous). 2.Hotter objects emit photons with a higher average energy (bluer).

24 Hottest stars: 50,000 K. Coolest stars: 3,000 K. (Sun’s surface is 5,800 K.)

25 Solid Molecules Neutral Gas Ionized Gas (Plasma) Level of ionization also reveals star’s temperature. 10 K 10 2 K 10 3 K 10 4 K 10 5 K 10 6 K

26 Absorption lines in a star’s spectrum tell us its ionization level.

27 Lines in a star’s spectrum correspond to a spectral type that reveals its temperature. (Hottest) O B A F G K M (Coolest) Fewer lines More lines

28 (Hottest) O B A F G K M (Coolest) Remembering Spectral Types “Oh Boy An F Grade Kills Me…” Also subdivide each type: e.g., (hottest) A0, A1, …, A9 (coolest). The Sun is type G2.

29 Thought Question Which of the stars below is hottest? A.M star B.F star C.A star D.K star

30 Thought Question Which of the stars below is hottest? A.M star B.F star C.A star D.K star

31 Pioneers of Stellar Classification Annie Jump Cannon and the “calculators” at Harvard laid the foundation of modern stellar classification.

32 How do we measure stellar masses?

33 The orbit of a binary star system depends on strength of gravity.

34 Types of Binary Star Systems Visual binary. Eclipsing binary. Spectroscopic binary. About half of all stars are in binary systems.

35 Visual Binary We can observe the orbital motions of these stars directly.

36 Eclipsing Binary We can measure periodic eclipses.

37 Spectroscopic Binary We can measure Doppler shifts.

38 Isaac Newton We measure mass using gravity. Direct mass measurements are possible only for stars in binary star systems. p = period a = average separation p 2 = a 3 4π 2 G (M 1 + M 2 )

39 r M v Need 2 out of 3 observables to measure mass… 1.Orbital period (p). 2.Orbital separation (a or r = radius). 3.Orbital speed (v). For circular orbits, v = 2r / p.

40 Most massive stars: 100 M Sun. Least massive stars: 0.08 M Sun. (M Sun is the mass of the Sun.)

41 Summary We have discussed 5 ways of determining stellar properties: 1.Distance – use stellar parallax. 2.Luminosity – use distance and apparent brightness (inverse square law). 3.Temperature – use color (thermal radiation law; red = cool, blue = hot). 4.Spectral type (OBAFGKM) – use absorption spectrum (ionization level). 5.Mass – use binary stars.  Visual, eclipsing, and/or spectroscopic binaries.


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