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Characteristics of Stars

Characteristics of Stars. Characteristics of Stars. Distances and Size Magnitude Elements Mass and Temperature. Distances and Size. The Astronomical Unit is used within the solar system It is 93 Mmiles or the distance from the Earth to the sun. Distances.

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Characteristics of Stars

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  1. Characteristics of Stars

  2. Characteristics of Stars • Distances and Size • Magnitude • Elements • Mass and Temperature

  3. Distances and Size • The Astronomical Unit is used within the solar system • It is 93 Mmiles or the distance from the Earth to the sun

  4. Distances • Kilometers ( or miles) can be used to measure the sizes of planets

  5. Distances and Size • The sun is the standard unit for the size of stars

  6. Distance and Size • Sirius is 2.5 suns and Pollux is 4 suns in size

  7. Distances and Size • Betelgeuse is 1000 suns in size

  8. Distance and Size • The distances to stars can be measured by • Light years • The distance light travels in 1 year • 300,000 km/sec • This is 9.5 trillion km in 1 year • Proxima Centauri is 4.2 ly away or 39,900,000,000,000 km or 24.8 trillion miles • The circumference of the Earth is ~25,000 miles • Parsecs • 3.26 ly • When a star is this far away it starts showing parallax • Distances to stars are also measured in parsecs

  9. Parallax Explained(Do Not Write This Slide Down… Just Read And Try) • Parallax measurements take advantage of the fact that, as the Earth orbits around the Sun, relatively near-by stars appear to move with respect to the fixed, very distant stars (see the diagram below). This is the same thing that happens when you look at a close object with first one eye and then the other. • For example, hold your thumb at the tip of your nose. Look at your thumb with first your right eye and then your left. Your thumb appears to move because your eyes are not at exactly the same place, so each eye views the thumb from a different angle. Now hold your thumb at arm's length and repeat the experiment. Your thumb will still appear to shift, but will not appear to move as much as it did when it was closer. • The same thing happens to stars. The closer stars appear to shift more than the farther stars. The "fixed" background stars are not really fixed; they are just so far away that we cannot distinguish their apparent shift. The apparent shift of the stars is called their parallax.

  10. Parallax

  11. Parallax Continued (2 Examples) The wider the angle, the closer the star = 1/3600 of a degree 3.26 light years How we came up with a parsec

  12. km, parsec, AU, light year, meter • Put these distances in order from smallest to largest km, parsec, AU, light year, meter (Smallest) Meter, km, AU, Light Year, Parsec (Largest)

  13. Magnitude (the brightness of a star) • Apparent Magnitude • Luminosity • Absolute Magnitude

  14. Apparent Magnitude • How bright a star appears to be • Dependent on • Distance from Earth • Not standardized • Does not reflect a star’s true brightness

  15. Luminosity • The actual brightness of a star • Depends on • Size • Bigger = Brighter • Temperature • Hotter = Brighter If 2 stars were the same size but star A was 6000º=C and star B is 10,000ºC, which one would be brighter?

  16. Absolute Magnitude • The way astronomers express true brightness or luminosity • How bright the stars are if they were lined up 10 parsecs away from Earth • Depends on • Size and Temperature • The more negative a # the brighter the star

  17. Absolute Magnitude • Put these stars in order from brightest to dimmest (1=brightest 4=dimmest) • Antares: -5.38 • Procyon:+2.62 • Spica: -3.55 • Sirius: +1.42 1 4 ** Look at the chart on 623. Which star has the brightest apparent magnitude? 2 3

  18. Elements • By now you should know how scientists determine what elements are in stars • (comparing emission and absorption spectra!) • Hydrogen and Helium are found in the greatest quantities • All of the other elements are found in various amounts • No 2 stars have the same exact make-up of elements

  19. Mass and Temperature • Mass – Difficult to measure • Observations such as gravitational influence are used to determine this • Compared to sun (like size) • Temperature – determines the color

  20. Temperature and Color COOL HOT • Blue stars are hotter • Blue light has a shorter wavelength, this means it has more energy • Red stars are cooler • Red light has a longer wavelength, this means it has less energy

  21. What are the characteristic of stars? • Distance and size • Magnitude • Elements • Mass and temperature • All of the above

  22. What is an Astronomical Unit (AU)? • Distance from Moon to Earth • Distance from sun to The Moon • Distance from sun to Earth • Distance from Earth to Proxima Centauri

  23. What is a light year? • The distance light travels in one month • 300,000 km/sec • The distance light travels in one year • Both 2 and 3 • All of the above

  24. What is a parsec? • 3.26 ly (light years) • The distance from sun to Earth • The distance light travels in one year • A measure of time

  25. Parallax helps scientists… • Figure out the distances of stars from Earth • Figure out the temperature of stars • Figure out the size of stars • Figure out the brightness of stars

  26. A parsec is larger than a light year • True • False

  27. Absolute magnitude is… • How bright a star appears to be from Earth • The actual brightness of a star • How bright the stars are if they were lined up 10 parsecs away from Earth (True brightness)

  28. Apparent magnitude is… • How bright a star appears to be from Earth • The actual brightness of a star • How bright the stars are if they were lined up 10 parsecs away from Earth (True brightness)

  29. Luminosity is… • How bright a star appears to be from Earth • The actual brightness of a star • How bright the stars are if they were lined up 10 parsecs away from Earth (True brightness or luminosity)

  30. Red stars are hotter than blue ones • True • False

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