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Starry Monday at Otterbein

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Title: Starry Monday at Otterbein


1
Starry Monday at Otterbein
Welcome to
  • Astronomy Lecture Series
  • -every first Monday of the month-
  • November 7, 2005
  • Dr. Uwe Trittmann

2
Todays Topics
  • Classification of Stars
  • The Night Sky in November

3
Feedback!
  • Please write down suggestions/your interests on
    the note pads provided
  • If you would like to hear from us, please leave
    your email / address
  • To learn more about astronomy and physics at
    Otterbein, please visit
  • http//www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/weitkamp.asp
    (Obs.)
  • http//www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/ (Physics
    Dept.)

4
Classification of Stars
  • We can classify stars by many categories
  • Name
  • Position
  • Constellation
  • Distance
  • Color
  • Temperature
  • Size
  • Brightness
  • Spectra
  • Features double stars, variable stars,

5
How Stars Got Their Names
  • Some have names that go back to ancient times
    (e.g. Castor and Pollux, Greek mythology)
  • Some were named by Arab astronomers (e.g.
    Aldebaran, Algol, etc.)
  • Since the 17th century we use a scheme that lists
    stars by constellation
  • in order of their apparent brightness
  • labeled alphabetically in Greek alphabet
  • Alpha Centauri is the brightest star in
    constellation Centaurus
  • Some dim stars have names according to their
    place in a catalogue (e.g. Ross 154)

6
Positions of Stars
  • The Celestial Sphere
  • An imaginary sphere surrounding the earth, on
    which we picture the stars attached
  • Axis through earths north and south pole goes
    through celestial north and south pole
  • Earths equator
  • Celestial equator

7
Celestial Coordinates
  • Earth latitude, longitude
  • Sky
  • declination (dec) from equator,/-90
  • right ascension (RA) from vernal equinox, 0-24h
    6h90
  • Examples
  • Westerville, OH 40.1N, 88W
  • Betelgeuse (a Orionis) dec 7 24
    RA 5h 52m

8
But Whats up for you
  • Observer Coordinates
  • Horizon the plane you stand on
  • Zenith the point right above you
  • Meridian the line from North to Zenith to south

9
depends where you are!
  • Your local sky
  • your view depends on your location on
    earth

10
Constellations of Stars
  • About 5000 stars visible with naked eye
  • About 3500 of them from the northern hemisphere
  • Stars that appear to be close are grouped
    together into constellations since antiquity
  • Officially 88 constellations
    (with strict boundaries for
    classification of objects)
  • Names range from mythological (Perseus,
    Cassiopeia) to technical (Air Pump, Compass)

11
Constellations of Stars (contd)
  • Orion as seen at night Orion as
    imagined by men

12
Constellations (contd)
  • Orion from the side
  • ?Stars in a constellation are not connected in
    any real way they arent even close together!

13
Distances to the Stars
  • Parallax can be used out to about 100 light years
  • The parsec
  • Distance in parsecs 1/parallax (in arc seconds)
  • Thus a star with a measured parallax of 1 is 1
    parsec away
  • 1 pc is about 3.3 light years
  • The nearest star (Proxima Centauri) is about 1.3
    pc or 4.3 lyr away
  • Solar system is less than 1/1000 lyr

14
Our Stellar Neighborhood
15
Scale Model
  • If the Sun a golf ball, then
  • Earth a grain of sand
  • The Earth orbits the Sun at a distance of one
    meter
  • Proxima Centauri lies 270 kilometers (170 miles)
    away
  • Barnards Star lies 370 kilometers (230 miles)
    away
  • Less than 100 stars lie within 1000 kilometers
    (600 miles)
  • The Universe is almost empty!
  • Hipparcos satellite measured distances to nearly
    1 million stars in the range of 100 pc
  • almost all of the stars in our Galaxy are more
    distant

16
Brightness
  • A measure of the apparent brightness
  • Logarithmic scale
  • Notation 1m.4 (smaller ?brighter)
  • Originally six groupings
  • 1st magnitude the brightest
  • 6th magnitude the dimmest
  • The modern scale is more complex
  • The absolute magnitude is the apparent magnitude
    a star would have at a distance of 10 pc 2M.8

17
Electromagnetic Spectrum
18
Three Things Light Tells Us
  • Temperature
  • from black body spectrum
  • Chemical composition
  • from spectral lines
  • Radial velocity
  • from Doppler shift

19
Black Body Spectrum (gives away the temperature)
Peak frequency
  • All objects - even you - emit radiation of all
    frequencies, but with different intensities

20
Measuring Temperatures
  • Find maximal intensity
  • ? Temperature (Wiens law)

Identify spectral lines of ionized elements ?
Temperature
21
Wiens Law
  • The peak of the intensity curve will move with
    temperature, this is Wiens law
  • ? T const. 0.0029 m K
  • So the higher the temperature T, the smaller
    the wavelength ?, i.e. the higher the energy of
    the electromagnetic wave

22
Luminosity and Brightness
  • Luminosity L is the total power (energy per unit
    time) radiated by the star
  • Apparent brightness B is how bright it appears
    from Earth
  • Determined by the amount of light per unit area
    reaching Earth
  • B ? L / d2
  • Just by looking, we cannot tell if a star is
    close and dim or far away and bright

23
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

24
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!

25
Star Systems Binary Stars
  • Some stars form binary systems stars that orbit
    one another
  • visual binaries
  • spectroscopic binaries
  • eclipsing binaries
  • Beware of optical doubles
  • stars that happen to lie along the same line of
    sight from Earth
  • We cant determine the mass of an isolated star,
    but of a binary star

26
Visual Binaries
  • Members are well separated, distinguishable

27
Spectroscopic Binaries
  • Too distant to resolve the individual stars
  • Can be viewed indirectly by observing the
    back-and-forth Doppler shifts of their spectral
    lines

28
Eclipsing Binaries (Rare!)
  • The orbital plane of the pair almost edge-on to
    our line of sight
  • We observe periodic changes in the starlight as
    one member of the binary passes in front of the
    other

29
Spectral Classification of the Stars
  • 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
30
Spectral Lines Fingerprints of the Elements
  • Can use spectra to identify elements on distant
    objects!
  • Different elements yield different emission
    spectra

31
Origin of Spectral Lines
  • Atoms electrons orbiting nuclei
  • Chemistry deals only with electron orbits
    (electron exchange glues atoms together to from
    molecules)
  • Nuclear power comes from the nucleus
  • Nuclei are very small
  • If electrons would orbit the statehouse on I-270,
    the nucleus would be a soccer ball in Gov. Bob
    Tafts office
  • Nuclei made out of protons (el. positive) and
    neutrons (neutral)

32
  • The energy of the electron depends on orbit
  • When an electron jumps from one orbital to
    another, it emits (emission line) or absorbs
    (absorption line) a photon of a certain energy
  • The frequency of emitted or absorbed photon is
    related to its energy
  • E h f
  • (h is called Plancks constant, f is
    frequency)

33
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.
    This may look strange, e.g. K5III for Aldebaran.
    Ignore the roman numbers ( III means a giant
    star, V means dwarf star, etc). 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.

34
Constructing a HR-Diagram
  • Example Aldebaran, spectral type K5III,
    luminosity 160 times that of the Sun

L
1000
Aldebaran
160
100
10
1
Sun (G2V)
O B A F G K M
Type
0123456789 0123456789 012345
35
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

36
Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams
  • of the closest stars of the brightest stars

37
Mass and the Main Sequence
  • The position of a star in the main sequence is
    determined by its mass
  • ?All we need to know to predict luminosity and
    temperature!
  • Both radius and luminosity increase with mass

38
Stellar Lifetimes
  • From the luminosity, we can determine the rate of
    energy release, and thus rate of fuel consumption
  • Given the mass (amount of fuel to burn) we can
    obtain the lifetime
  • Large hot blue stars 20 million years
  • The Sun 10 billion years
  • Small cool red dwarfs trillions of years
  • ?The hotter, the shorter the life!

39
Preview Stellar Lifecycle
  • Next Starry Monday
  • How stars are born and die
  • What makes stars shine
  • Planetary nebulae are dead stars!
  • and much more

40
The Night Sky in November
  • Back to standard time -gt earlier observing!
  • Autumn constellations are up Cassiopeia,
    Pegasus, Perseus, Andromeda, Pisces ? lots of
    open star clusters!
  • Mars at opposition
  • Saturn is visible later at night

41
Moon Phases
  • Today (New Moon, 36)
  • 11 / 8 (First Quarter Moon)
  • 11 / 15 (Full Moon)
  • 11 / 23 (Last Quarter Moon)
  • 12/ 1 (New Moon)

42
Today at Noon
  • Sun at meridian, i.e. exactly south

43
10 PM
  • Typical observing hour, early November
  • Mars
  • Uranus at meridian
  • Neptune

Moon
44
South-East
  • Plejades
  • Mars at its brightest in Aries

45
West
  • The summer triangle is still hanging on

46
Due North
  • Big Dipper points to the north pole

47
High up the Autumn Constellations
  • W of Cassiopeia
  • Big Square of Pegasus
  • Andromeda Galaxy

48
Andromeda Galaxy
  • PR Foto
  • Actual look

49
South-East
  • High in the sky
  • Perseus and
  • Auriga
  • with Plejades and the Double Cluster

50
South-West
  • Planets
  • Uranus
  • Neptune
  • Zodiac
  • Capricorn
  • Aquarius

51
Mark your Calendars!
  • Next Starry Monday January 9, 2005, 7 pm
  • (this is a Monday
    )
  • Observing at Prairie Oaks Metro Park
  • Friday, November 18, 730 pm
  • Web pages
  • http//www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/weitkamp.asp
    (Obs.)
  • http//www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/ (Physics
    Dept.)

52
Mark your Calendars II
  • Physics Coffee is every Wednesday, 330 pm
  • Open to the public, everyone welcome!
  • Location across the hall, Science 256
  • Free coffee, cookies, etc.

53
Its Nuclear Fusion !
  • Atoms electrons orbiting nuclei
  • Chemistry deals only with electron orbits
    (electron exchange glues atoms together to from
    molecules)
  • Nuclear power comes from the nucleus
  • Nuclei are very small
  • If electrons would orbit the statehouse on I-270,
    the nucleus would be a soccer ball in Gov. Bob
    Tafts office
  • Nuclei made out of protons (el. positive) and
    neutrons (neutral)

54
Nuclear fusion reaction
  • 4 hydrogen nuclei combine (fuse) to form a helium
    nucleus, plus some byproducts
  • Mass of products is less than the original mass
  • The missing mass is emitted in the form of
    energy, according to Einsteins famous formulas
  • E mc2
  • (the speed of light is very large, so there is a
    lot of energy in even a tiny mass)

55
Further Reactions Heavier Elements
56
Could We Use This on Earth?
  • Requirements
  • High temperature
  • High density
  • Very difficult to achieve on Earth!

57
Nuclear Fission
  • Problems limited fuel supply, dangerous
    byproducts, expensive technology, limited
    lifetime of power plant due to radiation

58
The Solar Neutrino Problem
  • We can detect the neutrinos coming from the
    fusion reaction at the core of the Sun
  • The results are 1/3 to 1/2 the predicted value!
  • Possible explanations
  • Models of the solar interior are incorrect
  • Our understanding of the physics of neutrinos is
    incorrect
  • Something is horribly, horribly wrong with the
    Sun
  • 2 is the answer neutrinos oscillate

59
Homework Luminosity and Distance
  • Distance and brightness can be used to find the
    luminosity
  • L ? d2 B
  • So luminosity and brightness can be used to find
    Distance of two stars 1 and 2
  • d21 / d22 L1 / L2 (since B1 B2
    )

60
Stars II - Lifecycle
61
The Fundamental Problem
  • We study the subjects of our research for a tiny
    fraction of its lifetime
  • Suns life expectancy 10 billion (1010) years
  • Careful study of the Sun 370 years
  • We have studied the Sun for only 1/27 millionth
    of its lifetime!

62
Suppose we study human beings
  • Human life expectancy 75 years
  • 1/27 millionth of this is about 74 seconds
  • What can we learn about people when allowed to
    observe them for no more than 74 seconds?

63
Star Formation
  • A stars existence is based on a competition
    between gravity (inward) and pressure due to
    energy production (outward)
  • Stage 1 Contraction of a cold interstellar cloud
  • Lasts about 2 million years
  • Central temperature about 10 K
  • Size tens of parsecs

64
Star Formation (contd)
  • Stage 2 Cloud contracts/warms, begins radiating
    almost all radiated energy escapes
  • Duration 30,000 years
  • Temperature 100 K at center, 10 K at surface
  • Size about 100 times that of the solar system
  • Stage 3 Cloud becomes dense ? opaque to
    radiation ? radiated energy trapped ? core heats
    up
  • Duration 100,000 years
  • Temperature 10,000 K at center, 100 K at
    surface
  • Size the solar system

65
Example Orion Nebula
  • Orion Nebula is a place where stars are being born

66
Orion Nebula (M42)
67
Protostellar Evolution
  • Stage 4 increasing temperature at core slows
    contraction
  • Luminosity about 1000 times that of the sun
  • Duration 1 million years
  • Temperature 1 million K at core, 3,000 K at
    surface
  • Still too cool for nuclear fusion!
  • Size orbit of Mercury

68
The T Tauri Stage
  • Stage 5 (T Tauri)
  • Violent surface activity
  • high solar wind blows out the remaining stellar
    nebula
  • Duration 10 million years
  • Temperature 5?106 K at core, 4000 K at surface
  • Still too low for nuclear fusion
  • Luminosity drops to about 10 ? the Sun
  • Size 10 ? the Sun

69
Possible T Tauri Stars
70
Jets from T Tauri Stars
71
Path in the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
  • Stages 1-5

72
Observational Confirmation
  • Preceding the result of theory and computer
    modeling
  • Can observe objects in various stages of
    development, but not the development itself

73
A Newborn Star
  • Stage 6 Temperature and density at core high
    enough to sustain nuclear fusion
  • Duration 30 million years
  • Temperature 10 million K at core, 4500 K at
    surface
  • Size slightly larger than the Sun
  • Stage 7 Main-sequence star pressure from
    nuclear fusion and gravity are in balance
  • Duration 10 billion years (much longer than all
    other stages combined)
  • Temperature 15 million K at core, 6000 K at
    surface
  • Size Sun

74
Path in the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
  • The new-born stars hops onto the main sequence

75
Mass Matters
  • Larger masses
  • higher surface temperatures
  • higher luminosities
  • take less time to form
  • have shorter main sequence lifetimes
  • Smaller masses
  • lower surface temperatures
  • lower luminosities
  • take longer to form
  • have longer main sequence lifetimes

76
Failed Stars Brown Dwarfs
  • Too small for nuclear fusion to ever begin
  • Less than about 0.08 solar masses
  • Give off heat from gravitational collapse
  • Luminosity a few millionths that of the Sun

77
Main Sequence Lifetimes
  • Mass (in solar masses) Luminosity
    Lifetime
  • 10 Suns 10,000
    Suns 10 Million yrs
  • 4 Suns
    100 Suns 2 Billion
    yrs
  • 1 Sun
    1 Sun 10 Billion yrs
  • ½ Sun
    0.01 Sun 500 Billion yrs

78
Why Do Stars Leave the Main Sequence?
  • Running out of fuel

79
Stage 8 Hydrogen Shell Burning
  • Cooler core ? imbalance between pressure and
    gravity ? core shrinks
  • hydrogen shell generates energy too fast ? outer
    layers heat up ? star expands
  • Luminosity increases
  • Duration 100 million years
  • Temperature 50 million K (core) to 4000 K
    (surface)
  • Size several Suns

80
Stage 9 The Red Giant Stage
  • Luminosity huge ( 100 Suns)
  • Core contains 25 of the stars mass and
    continues to shrink
  • Strong stellar winds eject up to 30 of stars
    mass from surface
  • Duration 100,000 years
  • Temperature 100 ? 106 K (core) to 4000 K
    (surface)
  • Size 70 Suns (orbit of Mercury)

81
Lifecycle
  • Lifecycle of a main sequence G star

82
The Helium Flash and Stage 10
  • The core becomes hot and dense enough to overcome
    the barrier to fusing helium into carbon
  • Initial explosion followed by steady (but rapid)
    fusion of helium into carbon
  • Lasts 50 million years
  • Temperature 200 million K (core) to 5000 K
    (surface)
  • Size 10 ? the Sun

83
Stage 11
  • Helium burning continues
  • Carbon ash at the core forms, and the star
    becomes a Red Supergiant
  • Duration 10 thousand years
  • Central Temperature 250 million K
  • Size gt orbit of Mars

84
Stage 12
  • Inner carbon core becomes dead it is out of
    fuel
  • Some helium and carbon burning continues in outer
    shells
  • The outer envelope of the star becomes cool
    enough for atoms to recombine with electrons, and
    becomes opaque solar radiation pushes it outward
    from the star
  • A planetary nebula is formed

Duration 100,000 years Central Temperature 300
? 106 K Surface Temperature 100,000 K Size 0.1
? Sun
85
Planetary Nebulae
  • Eye of God Nebula

86
Cats Eye Nebula
87
Wings of the Butterfly Nebula
88
  • The Ring Nebula (M57)

89
  • Eskimo Nebula

90
  • Stingray Nebula

91
  • Ant Nebula

92
Stage 13 White Dwarf
  • Core radiates only by stored heat, not by nuclear
    reactions
  • core continues to cool and contract
  • Temperature 100 ? 106 K at core 50,000 K at
    surface
  • Size Earth
  • Density a million times that of Earth 1 cubic
    cm has 1000 kg of mass!

93
Stage 14 Black Dwarf
  • Impossible to see in a telescope
  • About the size of Earth
  • Temperature very low
  • ? almost no radiation
  • ? black!

94
Evolution of More Massive Stars
  • Gravity is strong enough to overcome the electron
    pressure (Pauli Exclusion Principle) at the end
    of the helium-burning stage
  • The core contracts until its temperature is high
    enough to fuse carbon into oxygen
  • Elements consumed in core
  • new elements form while previous elements
    continue to burn in outer layers

95
Evolution of More Massive Stars
  • At each stage the temperature increases
  • ? reaction gets faster
  • Last stage fusion of iron does not release
    energy, it absorbs energy
  • ? cools the core
  • ? fire extinguisher

96
Neutron Core
  • The core cools and shrinks
  • nuclei and electrons are crushed together
  • protons combine with electrons to form neutrons
  • Ultimately the collapse is halted by neutron
    pressure
  • Most of the core is composed of neutrons at this
    point
  • Size few km
  • Density 1018 kg/m3 1 cubic cm has a mass of
    100 million kg!

Manhattan
97
Formation of the Elements
  • Light elements (hydrogen, helium) formed in Big
    Bang
  • Heavier elements formed by nuclear fusion in
    stars and thrown into space by supernovae
  • Condense into new stars and planets
  • Elements heavier than iron form during supernovae
    explosions
  • Evidence
  • Theory predicts the observed elemental abundance
    in the universe very well
  • Spectra of supernovae show the presence of
    unstable isotopes like Nickel-56
  • Older globular clusters are deficient in heavy
    elements

98
Review The life of Stars
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