finding the absolute magnitude to figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the...

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Finding the absolute Magnitude • To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star • Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: – In your mind, put the star from its actual position to a position 10 pc away – If a star is actually closer than 10pc, its absolute magnitude will be a bigger number, i.e. it is intrinsically dimmer than it appears – If a star is farther than 10pc, its absolute magnitude will be a smaller number, i.e. it is intrinsically brighter than it appears

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Page 1: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Finding the absolute Magnitude• To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to

know the distance to the star

• Then do the following Gedankenexperiment:– In your mind, put the star from its actual position to a

position 10 pc away– If a star is actually closer than 10pc, its absolute

magnitude will be a bigger number, i.e. it is intrinsically dimmer than it appears

– If a star is farther than 10pc, its absolute magnitude will be a smaller number, i.e. it is intrinsically brighter than it appears

Page 2: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Measuring the Sizes of Stars

• Direct measurement is possible for a few dozen relatively close, large stars– Angular size of the disk and known distance

can be used to deduce diameter

Page 3: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Indirect Measurement of Sizes

• Distance and brightness can be used to find the luminosity:

L d2 B (1)

• The laws of black body radiation also tell us that amount of energy given off depends on star size and temperature:

L R2 T4 (2)

• We can compare two values of absolute luminosity L to get the size

Page 4: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Sizes of Stars• Dwarfs

– Comparable in size, or smaller than, the Sun

• Giants– Up to 100 times

the size of the Sun

• Supergiants– Up to 1000 times

the size of the Sun

• Note: Temperature changes!

Page 5: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Classification of the Stars: Temperature

Class Temperature Color Examples

O 30,000 K blue

B 20,000 K bluish Rigel

A 10,000 K white Vega, Sirius

F 8,000 K white Canopus

G 6,000 K yellow Sun, Centauri

K 4,000 K orange Arcturus

M 3,000 K red Betelgeuse

Mnemotechnique: Oh, Be A Fine Girl/Guy, Kiss Me

Page 6: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

The Key Tool to understanding Stars: the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram

• Hertzsprung-Russell diagram is luminosity vs. spectral type (or temperature)

• To obtain a HR diagram: – get the luminosity. This is your y-coordinate. – Then take the spectral type as your x-coordinate, e.g.

K5 for Aldebaran. First letter is the spectral type: K (one of OBAFGKM), the arab number (5) is like a second digit to the spectral type, so K0 is very close to G, K9 is very close to M.

Page 7: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Constructing a HR-Diagram• Example: Aldebaran, spectral type K5III,

luminosity = 160 times that of the Sun

O B A F G K M Type… 0123456789 0123456789 012345…

1

10

100

1000

L

Aldebaran

Sun (G2V)

160

Page 8: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

The Hertzprung-

Russell Diagram• A plot of absolute

luminosity (vertical scale) against spectral type or temperature (horizontal scale)

• Most stars (90%) lie in a band known as the Main Sequence

Page 9: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams … of the closest stars …of the brightest stars

Page 10: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Star Formation(Compare: Solar System Formation)

Page 11: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Where Stars come from: the Interstellar Medium

• Gas– Single atoms and molecules– Mostly hydrogen (90%), 9% helium; deficient in heavier

elements

• Dust– Microscopic clumps of atoms/molecules– Size ~ 107 m, similar to the wavelength of visible light– Composition is not well known

• Temperature depends on the proximity of stars, typically ~100 K

• Density is very low!– Gas: about 1 atom/cm3 D; Dust: even less dense

Page 12: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

How do we know it’s there?

• Cold gas or dust doesn’t glow– they are dark

– We might “see” them blocking light of other objects (Dark Nebulae)

• Gas & Dust clouds are very dilute– they might not be blocking other object’s light totally

– Usually they will reduce (redden) the light of other objects

Page 13: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Reminder: Kirchhoff’s Laws

Cool gas absorbs light at specific frequencies

Dark Lines: “fingerprints of the elements”

Page 14: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Looking Through Dust Clouds

Page 15: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Seeing Through Gas and Dust• EM radiation is appreciably

scattered or absorbed only by particles with size comparable to its wavelength (or larger)

• Gas– Emission and absorption

lines

– Doesn’t block EM radiation

• Dust– Grain size is comparable to the wavelength of visible light

– Dims visible light and high frequency EM radiation

– Transparent to longer wavelength radio and infrared radiation, though

Page 16: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Scattering in Earth’s Atmosphere

Page 17: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Dust Clouds• What happens to the blue light scattered by the

dust clouds?• It’s still there, and sometimes can be seen

M20 Pleiades

Page 18: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Nebulae

• Any irregularly shaped cloud of gas and dust• May be bright or dark, depending on temperature• Types:

– Emission (bright) Nebulae

– Dark Nebulae

– Reflection Nebulae

• Historic Remark: Only some of the 109 “nebulae” catalogued by Charles Messier in 18th Century are actual nebulae; most are star clusters and galaxies

Page 19: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Dark Nebulae

• Classic Example: Horsehead Nebula in Orion

Can’t see what’s behind a dark nebula, that’s why we see it!

Page 20: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Dark Nebulae

• Dark Nebulae do emit light of their own, though

• Temperatures ~ 10 to 100 K; black body radiation peaks in the radio to infrared frequencies

fpeak in infrared frequencies

Page 21: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Dark Nebulae• Now you see it Now you don’t

• (infrared frequencies) (visible frequencies)

Rho Ophiuchi (visible light) Rho Ophiuchi (infrared)

Page 22: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Emission Nebulae

• Regions of hot glowing gas– Temperatures ~ 8000K

• Made to glow by ultraviolet radiation emitted by new O- or B-type (hot) stars located inside

• Emission lines from the nebula are easily distinguished from the continuous spectrum and absorption lines of stars within

• Color predominantly red, the color of a particular hydrogen emission line (the “H line”)

Page 23: Finding the absolute Magnitude To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to know the distance to the star Then do the following Gedankenexperiment: –In

Emission Nebulae Example: Orion Nebula (M 42)

• hot glowing gasTemperatures ~ 8000K

• Made to glow by ultraviolet radiation emitted by young O- or B-type (hot)

stars located inside

• Color predominantly red, the color of a particular hydrogen

emission line (“H”)