When you wish upon a star... - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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When you wish upon a star...

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So for every magnitude change we see with our eyes the brightness changes 10X. IDEA! ... We know relationship between luminosity and magnitude (Table previous ) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: When you wish upon a star...


1
When you wish upon a star...
2
shows what a dweeb you really are ..!
Luminosity and all that
  • Luminosity
  • Inverse square law
  • Magnitudes
  • Distance, temperature, composition ..
  • H-R diagram

3
Getting our bearings
4
Luminosity
  • Observing apparent brightness.
  • Brightness is the amount of energy striking per
    unit area of the human eye or a detector.
  • The amount we receive is affected by distance
    according to the inverse square law.

Apparent brightness (energy flux) ?
Luminosity/distance2
5
Luminosity and magnitudes
  • Apparent brightness.
  • Absolute brightness.
  • Apparent magnitude
  • Absolute magnitude

To compare intrinsic or absolute properties of
stars, use a standard distance of 10 pc.
6
Lets make this difficult (actually the ancient
Greeks are to blame)
  • Around second century B.C.E., Hipparchus scaled
    naked eye stars into a ranking of 1 to 6 (
    brightest to least bright).
  • 1 6 range spans a factor of 100 in apparent
    brightness. ( a 1st magnitude star is 100 X
    brighter than a 6th magnitude star).
  • The physiology of the human eye dictates that
    each magnitude change of 1 corresponds to a
    change of 2.5 in apparent brightness.
  • Combining both concepts 2.55 ? 100
  • A 1 st magnitude star is approximately 100 X
    brighter than a 6 th magnitude star

7
But what does it mean?
  • Well, lets look at the 10 pc thing

10 pc
Earth
Apparent Mag. gt Absolute Mag.
Apparent Mag. lt Absolute Mag.
Apparent brightness vs. absolute brightness?
8
Oh !
Brightness decreases this way !
Graph of apparent magnitudes of some common
things in the sky .
Brightness increases this way !
9
Luminosity and magnitude
  • We know from
  • Apparent brightness ? luminosity/distance2
  • And 2.55 ? 100 -gt 1001/5 ? 2.5.
  • So for every magnitude change we see with our
    eyes the brightness changes 10X.
  • IDEA! We can build a chart to relate luminosity
    to magnitudes

luminosity
magnitude
10
Recipe brightness to luminosity
  • To determine a stars luminosity
  • 1. Determine apparent brightness (use a chart or
    for a new star, measure amount of energy detected
    per unit time).
  • 2. Measure the stars distance (parallax method
    for nearby stars).
  • 3. Use apparent brightness luminosity/ d2

11
Using our recipe for more stuff
  • Let m apparent brightness
  • Use our recipe luminosity d2 m.
  • Star A d 0.707 pc, m 1, Star B d 2.12
    pc, m 1.
  • Find luminositys for Star A and Star B

12
More luminosity magnitude stuff
  • Making things simpler
  • Scale luminosities to solar luminosity this way
    we wont have to deal with units
  • Let m apparent magnitude, M absolute
    magnitude.
  • Throw in the inverse square relationship and some
    math and.

13
Tah Dah!!!
  • D 10 pc x 10(m M)/5
  • We have another formula for distance, D!
  • Do we believe it! Lets look at an example.
  • (alot like More Precisely ex., page 447)

14
Luminosity, temperature, size .
  • We know relationship between luminosity and
    magnitude (Table previous slide).
  • Using Wiens Law ?(peak emission) ?
    1/temperature
  • And Stefans law total energy emitted ?
    temperture4
  • Wiens law the hotter the object the bluer is
    its emission.
  • Stefans law energy emitted per unit area
    increases as the 4th power of the temperature..
  • Luminosity ? radius2 temperture4

Stellar size!
15
More tools from what we know
  • Knowledge of color/temperature relationship and
    now, luminosity/radius/tem-perature relationship
    combined with emission/absorption spectrum we get
    from certain stars, lets us classify our spectra
    (OBAFGKM) according to temperature.

16
H-R Diagram
Sizes, Temperature, Luminosities And
Stellar Lifetime
Star life time 1/(star mass)3
17
Features 1. 2. 3. 4.
18
H-R Diagram
http//instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/courses/astro101/
java/evolve/evolve.htm
  • stellar mass determines lifetime behavior of
    star
  • With regards to mass, you may want to note
  • size/masses of stars that spend
  • all their lives on the main sequence
  • some of their lives on the main sequence
  • leave main sequence early
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