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Cepheid Variables: Measuring the distance of Galaxies

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Time in days. Apparent Brightness in Magnitudes. Data Table. HV 837. HV ... Absolute magnitude is what the apparent magnitude of the same star at 10 parsecs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cepheid Variables: Measuring the distance of Galaxies


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Cepheid VariablesMeasuring the distance of
Galaxies
  • Dr Lisa Jardine-Wright
  • Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge

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Measuring Distances
  • How do we measure the distances of galaxies
    outside our own Milky Way?
  • We use objects called standard candles within
    each of the galaxies
  • Can be thought of as bright beacons which act as
    reference points. For example,
  • Cepheid variable stars
  • Supernovae

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Cepheid Variable Stars
  • Cepheids are special stars
  • because they blink, whats
  • more they blink at a rate that
  • is precisely related to their
  • brightness.
  • If we can measure the rate that they are blinking
    then we can infer how bright they are.
  • Then we compare how bright they look to us and
    how bright they are as calculated from their
    blink rate.
  • Distance

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Why Do Cepheids Pulse?
  • A cepheid is a young star which is burning
    brightly.
  • He2 is more opaque and wont let the radiation
    escape, so the radiation heats the gas within the
    star
  • Heating increases the pressure of the gas and
    this pressure pushes layers of the star outwards,
    increasing its size and luminosity
  • As it expands it cools and becomes transparent
    again.

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Practical Cepheid Variables
  • Using some real light curves for Cepheid
    Variables we will measure the distances to the 4
    galaxies to which they belong.

0
0
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Measuring the Distance
  • First of all we measure the light curve for the
    cepheids in our distant galaxy to calculate the
    period of its pulses.
  • The period of our distant Cepheid is then
    compared it to observations of Cepheids in the
    local Universe to calculate its luminosity

Apparent Brightness in Magnitudes
Time in days
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Data Table
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Calibration Line
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Data Table
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Final Step Distance
  • We now know the real luminosity, L of the Cepheid
    and we know the flux, F of light that we measured
    from Earth ? distance.
  • Light energy from the Cepheid is emitted in all
    directions.
  • Flux is the amount of energy that crosses a
    square metre at a given distance, d.

d
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Derivation of Distance Modulus
  • A magnitude is defined as so that magnitude 0
    corresponds to a flux F0
  • Comparing to stars D and E
  • Absolute magnitude is what the apparent magnitude
    of the same star at 10 parsecs

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Derivation of Distance Modulus
  • Combining these equations (where distance d is in
    parsecs)
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