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Stars and Galaxies

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Zodiac. Named after gods, animals, and heroes. Stars are not necessarily near each other ... Black holes. If the star was bigger than 30 times the mass of the sun ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stars and Galaxies


1
Chapter 2
  • Stars and Galaxies

2
Where are you?
  • The Earth circles the sun
  • The sun is one of billions of billions of stars.
  • To measure distances between stars we a distance
    measurement called the Light- year
  • 1 light-year is the distance light travels in one
    year.

3
Light-Year
  • Light moves at 300,000 km/sec
  • Thats 186,000 mile/sec
  • It would reach the sun in about 5 minutes
  • How far would it go in a year?
  • Nearest star is 4.3 light years away

4
Binary Stars
  • Most stars are found in pairs
  • These stars revolve around each other
  • If a dim star passes in front of a bright star,
    it will block its light.
  • Called an eclipsing binary
  • Algol dims every 69 hours
  • The closest star -Alpha Centari is actually a
    triple star system

5
Binary System
Side
Top
6
Constellations
  • Groups of stars that appear to stay together
  • Zodiac
  • Named after gods, animals, and heroes
  • Stars are not necessarily near each other

7
Nova
  • A star getting suddenly brighter
  • Occurs in a binary star system
  • Gases from one star are pulled into the other.
  • Causing a nuclear explosion.

8
Clusters
  • Smaller groups of stars within a galaxy
  • Globular Clusters- Spherical shaped with may (up
    to 100,000 stars)
  • Open clusters- less organized- with fewer stars
    ( hundreds )

9
Nebula
  • Gas and dust clouds in space.
  • Most cant be seen
  • If they reflect light from nearby stars they can
    be seen
  • Probably the birthplace of new stars

10
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11
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12
Ring Nebula
13
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14
Galaxies
  • Huge collections of stars
  • each may contain hundreds of billions of stars
  • The major feature of the universe
  • Maybe as many as 100 billion galaxies

15
Types of Galaxies
  • Elliptical - round, from flat disks to spheres -
    contain older stars
  • Spiral- Flattened arms that spin around a center
  • Irregular- no definite shape -less common

16
Andromeda
17
Large Magellanic Cloud
18
M51
19
M83
20
Milky Way
  • Our galaxy
  • almost all the stars you can see in the sky
  • 100,000 light-years across
  • 15,000 top to bottom
  • 100 to 200 billion stars

21
Spectrum
22
Prism
  • White light is made up of all the colors of the
    visible spectrum.
  • Passing it through a prism separate it.

23
If the light is not white
  • Stars give off different colors of light
  • Passing this light through a prism does something
    different.
  • How we know what stars are made of.

24
  • Spectra from stars will have lines missing

25
Doppler Effect
  • Change in wavelength caused by the apparent
    motion of the source.
  • Cars moving by you
  • Same things happen to light
  • Light from objects coming toward you is
    compressed looks more blue
  • Light from objects away looks more red

26
Red Shift
  • Light from galaxies moving away

27
Blue Shift
  • Light from galaxies moving toward us

28
A big surprise
  • No Galaxies showed blue shift
  • All galaxies showed red shift.
  • Which means
  • All galaxies were moving away
  • The universe is expanding

29
The Big Bang Theory
  • The universe started with a concentrated area of
    matter and energy.
  • 15-20 billion years ago
  • Then it exploded and has been expanding ever
    since
  • Faster moving stuff traveled farther
  • Explained red shift

30
Big Bang Theory
  • Predicts energy should be evenly distributed
  • Astronomers did find it
  • Called background radiation
  • Evenly spread throughout the universe.

31
Gravity
  • Force of attraction
  • All objects attract each other.
  • Pulled matter into clumps
  • These clumps became bigger
  • became galaxies

32
Open or closed?
  • Two possible results of big bang.
  • Open universe will continue expanding
  • Stars will eventually lose all energy
  • end of universe is emptiness.
  • In a few hundred billion years

33
Closed Universe
  • Gravity will eventually pull all the galaxies
    back together.
  • Eventually all matter will come back together at
    the center of the galaxy
  • Blue shift
  • Packed into a area as small as a period.
  • Then another big bang
  • Every 80 to 100 million years.

34
Quasars
  • Quasi - stellar radio source
  • Quasi- means something like
  • stellar means star
  • Most distant objects in the universe -12 billion
    light years
  • Give off tremendous energy as x-rays and radio
    waves
  • as much as 100 galaxies

35
Quasars
  • 1 sec, enough for 1 billion years electricity for
    Earth
  • At the edge of the universe
  • At the very beginning of the universe

36
Another Tool
  • Spectroscope
  • Breaks the light of a star up into its colors
  • Called a spectrum
  • Kind of spectrum tells scientists
  • what the star is made of
  • which way and how fast it is moving

37
Stars
  • Are formed by the same forces
  • Have different
  • Size
  • Composition
  • Temperature
  • Color
  • Mass
  • Brightness

38
Size
  • 5 main categories
  • Medium sized - like our sun
  • from 1/10 size of sun to 10 times its size
  • Giant stars- 10 to 100 times bigger than the sun
  • Supergiant stars- 100 to 1000 times bigger than
    the sun

39
Size
  • White dwarfs- smaller than 1/10 the size of the
    sun
  • Neutron stars - smallest stars - about 16 km in
    diameter

40
Composition
  • Determined with a spectroscope
  • by the colors of light it gives off
  • The lightest element Hydrogen makes up 60 - 80
    of a star
  • Helium is second most
  • 96-99 is hydrogen and helium
  • rest is other elements -

41
Temperature
  • Color also indicates temperature
  • hottest surface 50000 C
  • coolest -3000C

42
Brightness
  • Magnitude - measure of brightness
  • Apparent magnitude - how bright it looks from
    earth
  • Absolute magnitude - how bright it really is
  • Variable stars - brightness changes from time to
    time
  • Cephid variables - pulsating variables- change
    both brightness and size

43
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram
  • Found that as temperature increased, so did
    absolute magnitude
  • 90 of stars followed this pattern
  • Called main sequence stars
  • Other 10 were once main sequence stars but have
    changed over time

44
Absolute Magnitude
50000
20000
10000
6600
6000
5000
3000
45
Distance to stars
  • One method is parallax
  • Apparent change in position as the earth goes
    around the sun

46
Measure the angle to the star
Wait half a year
Measure the angle to the star
Triangle tells distance
47
Distance to stars
  • Parallax works only to 100 light-years
  • More than 100 light-years they use a complicated
    formula based on apparent and absolute magnitude.
  • More than 7 million light-years they use the red
    shift

48
Why Stars Shine
  • Stars are powered by nuclear fusion
  • Hydrogen atoms join to form helium
  • Happens because gravity pulls the atoms in the
    core so close together
  • The sun turns 600 billion kilograms of hydrogen
    to 595.8 kilograms of helium every second
  • The 4.2 billion kilograms of mass are turned to
    energy -light, heat, UV, x-rays
  • E mc2

49
The Sun
  • An average star
  • Over 1 million earths would fit inside
  • 1/4 the density of the Earth
  • made of 4 layers

50
  • Corona- Outermost layer
  • Temp-1,700,000ºC
  • Few particles
  • Chromosphere-
  • middle of atmosphere
  • Temp-27,800ºC
  • 1000s of km thick

51
Corona
52
Chromosphere
53
  • Photosphere-
  • Temp-6000ºC
  • 550 km thick
  • Surface of the sun

Core-
1,000,000ºC
15,000,000ºC
54
Activity on the Sun
  • Storms on the sun
  • Prominences- Loops or arches of gas that rise
    from the chromosphere
  • Solar Flares- Bright bursts of light, huge
    amounts of energy released
  • Sunspots- Dark areas on the suns surface
  • in the lower atmosphere
  • Motion shows the rotation of the sun
  • Interferes with radio

55
Solar Prominence
56
Solar Wind
  • Continuous stream of high energy particles.
  • Can also interfere with radio and TV

57
Star Life Cycles
  • Stars change over time
  • New stars form from nebulae
  • Gravity pulls the dust and gas together
  • Mostly hydrogen
  • Forms a spinning cloud
  • Hydrogen atoms hit each other and heat up

58
Star Life Cycle
  • When the temperature reaches 15,000,000 C fusion
    begins
  • Makes a protostar - a new star
  • What determines the life cycle of the star is how
    much mass it starts with.

59
Medium-Sized stars
  • Shine for a few billion years as hydrogen turns
    to helium.
  • When hydrogen is used up, the core is almost all
    helium.
  • Helium core shrinks and heats up
  • Makes outside expand and cool
  • Gives off red light
  • Becomes red giant

60
Medium-Sized Stars
  • Helium in core turns to carbon
  • Last of hydrogen gas drifts away to become a ring
    nebula or a planetary nebula.
  • When last of helium is used up the core collapses
    and becomes a white dwarf
  • Incredibly dense- a teaspoon will weigh tons

61
How long
  • It depends on the mass.
  • The smaller a star starts out, the longer it
    takes
  • From a few to 100 billion years for medium sized
    stars
  • The sun will take about 10 billion years

62
Massive Stars
  • Start with at least 6 times the mass of the sun.
  • Like medium stars up until they become red
    giants.
  • The helium in the core becomes carbon, but it
    keeps getting hotter.
  • Carbon atoms for heavier elements like oxygen and
    nitrogen and even iron

63
Massive stars
  • Cant go further than iron.
  • Iron absorbs energy until it explodes in a
    supernova
  • Temperatures up to 100,000,000,000C
  • Then heavier atoms can form
  • Explosion results in a new nebula,but with the
    new elements

64
Neutron Stars
  • If the star started out 6 to 30 times the mass of
    the sun, the core of the exploding star becomes a
    neutron star.
  • As massive as the sun, but only 16 km across.
  • Neutron stars spin rapidly and give off pulses of
    radio waves
  • If these radio waves come in pulses it is called
    a pulsar

65
Black holes
  • If the star was bigger than 30 times the mass of
    the sun
  • The left over core becomes so dense that light
    cant escape its gravity.
  • Becomes a black hole.
  • Grab any nearby matter and get bigger
  • As matter falls in, it gives off x-rays.
  • Thats how they find them
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