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Astronomy -the study of stars. Stars Huge spheres of hot, glowing gas –Example = sun Stars give off energy---how do we know this?

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Presentation on theme: "Astronomy -the study of stars. Stars Huge spheres of hot, glowing gas –Example = sun Stars give off energy---how do we know this?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Astronomy -the study of stars

2 Stars Huge spheres of hot, glowing gas –Example = sun Stars give off energy---how do we know this?

3 Energy = waves Electromagnetic spectrum

4 Huge spheres of hot, glowing gas –Example = sun Stars give off energy---how do we know this? –Visible light = we can see lots of stars in the sky –Radiant energy from the sun heats the earth –Also, some stars give off radio waves

5 Telescopes Use lenses or mirrors to collect and focus light from distant objects Three different types: –Refracting telescope –Reflecting telescope –Radio telescope Both of these are visible light telescopes

6 Refracting telescope Consists of 2 convex lenses –First lens (objective lens) gathers the light and focuses it –Second lens (eyepiece lens) magnifies it

7 Reflecting Telescope Uses a concave mirror to gather and focus light A smaller mirror inside reflects this image to the eyepiece lens which magnifies it

8 Radio Telescope Detects radio waves given off by objects in space Most have curved reflecting surfaces that are several hundred meters in diameter The bigger the radio telescope, the more radio waves it can collect

9 Traits which are only true of reflecting telescopes Traits which are only true of refracting telescopes Traits which are only true of radio telescopes Telescopes: Similarities and Differences

10 Spectroscopes Also called a spectrograph –Breaks the light from an object into its color spectrum –Astronomers use this to get information about stars including their chemical compositions and temperatures

11 Spectroscopes: star’s chemical composition What elements is a star made up of? Astronomers compare the banding patterns of known elements to those of the stars.

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13 What elements does this star contain?

14 What makes up the universe? On the right side of your paper, list as many things as you can come up with in one minute. Stars, galaxies, star systems, nebulae, etc. Universe = space and everything in it!

15 Review: What is a star? A star is a huge sphere of hot, glowing gas. Can you think of any examples of stars? –The sun is a star!

16 Stars What pieces of equipment can be used to gain information about stars? –Reflecting telescope –Refracting telescope –Radio telescope –SPECTROSCOPE!!

17 What is a galaxy? A galaxy is a cluster of stars. Billions of stars make up a galaxy. Can you think of the name of our galaxy? –Milky Way galaxy

18 How do we measure distance to stars and other galaxies? We have to use a unit called a light year. A light year is the distance light can travel in one year….HUGE! light year is a unit of distance, not time!!!! 1 light year= ~9.5 million million kilometers

19 Parallax Parallax is the apparent change in position of an object when you look at it from different places.

20 What characteristics classify stars? All stars are huge spheres of glowing gas (mostly hydrogen). Stars are classified based on 3 main physical characteristics: –Temperature –Brightness –size

21 LAB: Color vs. Temperature You will record the data for your lab in your Cornell notes on the RIGHT side.

22 Summary of Lab Findings On the right side, place the order of star color by increasing temperature For example: Coolest color  next color  dsfs  jsdhfjk  hottest color

23 Temperature of stars Color of a star reveals its temperature. Remember the color vs. temperature lab? –Red stars = relatively cool stars (still hot ~3200 degrees Celsius) –Yellow- white = medium temperature (~5500 degrees Celsius) –Blue-white stars = hottest stars (>10,000 degrees Celsius)

24 Brightness of stars Brightness = the amount of light stars give off –This depends on its size and temperature –How bright it looks from Earth depends on distance and actual brightness Apparent magnitude Absolute magnitude

25 Apparent Magnitude Brightness as seen from Earth Example: the sun looks very bright to us on Earth, but it is not the brightest star –It looks brighter because it is closer to earth than other stars.

26 Absolute Magnitude Brightness of a star if it were a standard distance from the earth

27 Review What characteristics are used to classify stars? Now, we will look at graphs that show these characteristics of stars…they are called HR diagrams

28 Hertzsprung – Russell Diagram

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