150 likes | 306 Views
Unit 6 --- Sixth Grade http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZDk1cbKp7s&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1. Stars. Most stars look like faint dots of light in the night sky…. But they are actually huge, hot bright balls of gas that are trillions of kilometers away from Earth
E N D
Unit 6 --- Sixth Grade http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZDk1cbKp7s&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 Stars
Most stars look like faint dots of light in the night sky… • But they are actually huge, hot bright balls of gas that are trillions of kilometers away from Earth • The Sun is our closest star, it’s 93 million miles away, and it takes about 8 minutes for its light to reach us on Earth.
The next closest star • The next closest star is Proxima Centauri, located 4.2 light years away. • A light year is the distance light travels in a single year – 9,460,528,000,000 kilometers, or 5,865,696,000,000 miles • Approximately 6 trillion • The light we see from Promima Centauri left the star 4.2 years ago • It would take our fastest spacecraft 50,000 years to reach ProximaCentauri!
Composition of Stars • Stars are made of different elements in the form of gases. • On average, stars are 70 percent hydrogen and 28 percent helium • Our Sun is 91% hydrogen and 9% helium • The inner layers are very dense and hot • The outer layers are made of cooler gases
Determining Composition • Because different elements absorb different wavelengths of light, astronomers can tell what a star is made of from the light they observe from the star • A Spectragraph breaks down a star’s light into a spectrum • From the colors on the spectrum, astronomers can determine what a star is made up of
Classifying Stars • In the 1800’s, aided by their spectragraphs, astronomers started to collect and classify the spectra of many stars. • At first, they were classified according to their composition, but that system was found to be flawed, and we now classify stars according to how hot they are.
Differences in Brightness • Stars are further classified by their brightness, or how brightly they shine in the sky. • At first, they were given numbers to indicate their brightness • The brightest stars were called first-magnitude stars • The dimmest were sixth-degree magnitude stars
Differences in Brightness • But when astronomers began to use telescopes, they began to see many stars they hadn’t discovered because they were so dim. • They added to their scale of magnitudes • Bright stars had a negative number • Dim stars had a positive number
So How Bright is That Star? • Look at the picture --- • Do all the lights look the same? • Do some appear to be brighter or dimmer? • Why? • The ones closer appear to be brighter, and the ones further away appear to be dimmer. • The same thing applies with stars!
Apparent Magnitude • The apparent brightness of a star from Earth is its apparent magnitude. • Apparent magnitude depends on how close the star is to the Earth • Closer stars appear to be brighter • The Sun’s apparent magnitude is -26.8,which means it is the brightest object in the sky (if you are on Earth) • Stars that are farther away appear to be dimmer.
Absolute Magnitude • Absolute Magnitude is the actual brightness of a star. • Astronomers "pretend" to line up stars exactly 10 parsecs (about 32.6 light years) away from Earth. • They then figure out how bright each star would look. • They call that brightness the star's absolute magnitude. • In all actuality, the Sun is not an especially bright star. • The Sun has an absolute magnitude of 4.83.
Measuring the Distances to Stars • As mentioned earlier, the unit of measurement used to measure the distances to stars is the light-year. • It is not a measurement of time as the name implies, it’s a measurement of distance. • One light year is equal to 9,460,528,000,000 kilometers, or 5,865,696,000,000 miles (6 trillion) • Since it would be very hard to run a measuring tape up into space for millions, billions and trillions of miles, astronomers use other methods to measure a star’s distance from Earth
Parallax • Some stars, the ones that are closest to Earth, appear to move, while those that are far away appear to stay in one place. • This apparent shift is called parallax • Astronomers use parallax and math to find the actual distances to stars that are close to Earth