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Introduction to Astrophysics. Ronald L. Westra Department Mathematics Maastricht University. Introduction to Astrophysics. 1. Astronomic Scales in Space and Time. Earth Sun Jupiter.
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Introduction to Astrophysics Ronald L. Westra Department Mathematics Maastricht University
Introduction to Astrophysics
1. Astronomic Scales in Space and Time
Earth Sun Jupiter.
Collection of galaxies. The three fuzzy galaxies left merging, The crisp galaxy in the center is on the background
Large-scale map of the observable universe showing the the largest structures visible in the universe. Each point in this diagram represents one single galaxy
The Universe at the young age of 300,000 years. The colors represent temperature fluctuations in the Cosmic Background Radiation Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe
The Giant Impact Theory suggests that a Mars-sized object crashed into the early Earth. Most of the debris thrown into space fell back on Earth, but a fraction aggregated into the Moon. This theory is supported by the similar composition of rocks on the Earth and Moon.
2. Stellar Evolution
Some characteristics of the sun radius (R) 7 1010 cm mass (M) 2 1033 g mean density () 1.4 g/cm3 total energy output (L) 3.82.1026 Joule/sec age 1.5 1017 sec core temperature 5 106 K surface temperature 5 103 K distance to earth 1.5 1013 cm
Spectral Types O – B – A – F – G – K – M – R – N – S
Glowing gaseous streamers of an extinct titanic supernova explosion of a massive star in Cassiopeia A (Cas A)
Composite image of the Crab Nebula showing superimposed images of X-ray (blue) (by Chandra X-ray space telescope), and optical (red) (by the Hubble space telescope).
First published registration of a pulsar, Hewish et al., Nature 217, p. 710, 1968.
log L/ L log Teffin K Path of the stellar evolution of a main sequence star of one solar mass in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram
L/ L sun surface temperature (K) The HRD for 10 stellar clusters. At right ordinate the age in billion years of the bifurcation point from the main sequence.
Abundances of chemical elements in the neighbourhood of our sun. The marks are from the intensities from spectral absorption lines in the sun’s atmosphere, the lines from meteorite and terrestrial data.
An example of an unstable – but not-periodic – star is this massive ‘Wolf-Rayet star’ NGC2359, that irregularly ejects large parts of its own outer envelope in gargantuan explosions. The star itself is in the central bubble, the clouds are remnants of previous ejections.
instability strip Cepheids RR Lyrae main sequence long period variables Luminosity surface temperature Variable stars in the HRD. Pulsating variable stars are found in the instability strip connecting the main sequence and the red-giant region.
Relation between luminosity and oscillation period for Cepheid type 1 variable stars.
Ronald L. Westra Systems Theory Group Department Mathematics Maastricht University Westra@math.unimaas.nl