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Stars and Galaxies

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Title: Chapter 27 Stars and Galaxies Author: Tom Tweardy Last modified by: Staff Created Date: 4/30/2006 10:18:17 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stars and Galaxies


1
Stars and Galaxies
2
BIG Idea
  • The life cycle of every star is determined by its
    mass, luminosity, magnitude, temperature, and
    composition.

3
  • Much of our information about our galaxy and the
    universe comes from ground-based observations

4
Hubble Space Telescope
  • In orbit since 1990.
  • Takes extremely sharp images from space.
  • Hubble observations have led to numerous
    scientific breakthroughs, including rate of
    expansion of the universe.

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I. Characteristics of Stars
  • Composition and Temperature
  • What are stars made of?

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  • mostly hydrogen (H)about 73 of a stars mass,
  • approximately 25 helium (He),
  • and the other elements in small amounts oxygen
    (O), carbon (C), nitrogen (N), silicon (Si),
    magnesium (Mg), neon (Ne), iron (Fe), sulfur (S)

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Spectral Types
  • Spectroscope instrument used to determine
    chemical composition by separating light into
    different colors (wavelengths).

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Which stars are the hottest stars?
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  • Blue stars are the hottest
  • Red stars are the coolest

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B. Motion and Distance to the Stars
  • Doppler Effect shift in wavelength of light
    source moving toward or away from an observer.
  • Blue Shift shorter wavelengths, stars moving
    towards Earth
  • Red Shift longer wavelengths, stars moving away
    from Earth

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  • Distances between stars and Earth are measured in
    light-years.
  • Light Year distance a light wave travels in one
    year
  • (one light year 236,750,151 times around the
    Earth)

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C. Stellar Magnitude
  • 1. Apparent Magnitude how bright a star
    appears from Earth (depends on light emitted
    and distance from Earth).

LOWER NUMBER BRIGHTER STAR
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2. Absolute Magnitude true brightness of a star.
  • How bright a star would appear if seen from the
    same distance (32.6 light years)
  • Most stars fall between -5 and 15
  • Our sun is 5 middle of the range

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3. Luminosity energy output from the surface of
a star per second measured in watts.
  • An Astronomer must know both the stars apparent
    magnitude and how far away the star is.
  • The brightness depends on both a stars
    luminosity and distance from Earth.

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D. Classification of Stars
  • H-R Diagram shows relationship between absolute
    magnitude and surface temperature of star
  • the brighter the star, the hotter it is

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  • Stars have a finite lifetime and evolve over time
  • The mass of a star controls its evolution, length
    of lifetime, and ultimate fate
  • As stars evolve, their positions on the
    Hertzsprung-Russell diagram move

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II. Stellar Evolution theory
  • 1. Nebula stars start out as clouds of gas and
    dust
  • 70 hydrogen
  • 28 helium
  • 2 heavier elements

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  • Nebula in the
  • Constellation Orion

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  • Star Formation

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  • Gravity pulls particles together, forming a
    sphere
  • As density increases, gravitational attraction
    increases
  • Gravitational forces cause denser regions of
    nebula to shrink
  • As regions become smaller, they spin more rapidly

29
  • Think of an ice skater
  • as he/she pulls his or her arms in closer, what
    happens to the rate of the spin?

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Protostar flattened disc of matter with a
central concentration (caused by shrinking,
spinning region)
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  • Pressure and density build within the
    protostars center, causing temperature to rise
  • Gas is so hot it becomes plasma (a fourth state
    of matter)
  • Temperature continues to increase until it
    reaches 10,000,000ºC
  • At this temperature nuclear fusion begins
  • A star is born !

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2. Main Sequence Stars
  • The second and longest stage in the life of a
    star
  • Most stars fall within the main sequence band
  • Our sun is a Main
  • Sequence Star

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  • During this main sequence stage, energy is
    generated in the core of the star as hydrogen
    atoms fuse to become helium atoms
  • Fusion releases huge amounts of radiant energy

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3. Giants very large cool bright star
  • Hydrogen starts to run out and the star expands
    greatly.
  • Super Giants are very big Giants
  • Our sun is 5 billion years old and has only
    converted 5 of its hydrogen to helium.

A Giant is 10x bigger than the Sun and a
Supergiant is 100x bigger
37
4. White Dwarf final stage of a star
  • Planetary Nebula expanding shell of gases
    shed by a dying star

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  • Gravity causes the last of the matter in the star
    to collapse inward
  • What remains is a hot, dense core of mattera
    WHITE DWARF
  • White dwarfs shine for billions of years before
    they cool completely
  • As white dwarfs cool they become fainter and
    fainter
  • When they no longer emit energy, they become a
    black dwarf, a dead star

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Black dwarfs probably do not yet existWHY?
40
Novas explosions that occur as a white dwarf
cools
  • Supernova star that has such a tremendous
    explosion that it blows itself apart.

41
Neutron Stars small but incredibly dense ball
of neutrons, formed from the collapsed core of a
supernova.
  • One teaspoon of material from a neutron star
    would weigh 100 million tons on Earth.

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Black Holes hole left by the collapse of a
supernova.
  • The gravity of a black hole is so great that not
    even light can escape from it.

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III. Star Groups
  • A. Constellations patterns of stars in the sky
  • there are 88 different patterns of stars
    recognized.

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B. Galaxies
  • A galaxy is a large group of stars bound by
    gravity.
  • typically 100,000 light-years wide
  • contain billions of stars

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Types of Galaxies
  • 1. Spiral central mass (nucleus) of bright stars
    with flat arms that spiral around it
  • arms contain millions of young stars, gas, and
    dust.

Top View
Side View
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  • 2. Elliptical nearly spherical with very bright
    centers no spiral arms
  • No young stars, dust, or gas

54
  • 3. Irregular no particular shape.
  • small and faint, with little gravitational
    attraction to organize it into a shape
  • may also be unorganized due to the collision with
    another galaxy

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What type of galaxy do we live in?
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The Milky Way
  • Spiral galaxy in which our solar system is
    located
  • 100,000 light-years wide
  • The sun is 30,000 light- years from the center
  • The sun revolves around the center at 250 km/sec
  • It takes 200 million years to make one
    revolution.

58
IV. FORMATION OF THE UNIVERSE
  • The Big Bang Theory most widely accepted theory
    explaining the formation of the universe.
  • All matter and energy in the universe was once
    concentrated in a very small, very hot, very
    dense volume
  • 12-15 billion years ago, the big bang occurred
  • Matter and energy were propelled outward in all
    directions
  • The universe began to E X P A N D

59
  • As matter and energy moved outward, the force of
    gravity had an effect
  • Matter began to condense, forming the galaxies
  • The galaxies continued to move outward, as they
    continue to do today

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V. The Sun
  • There is nothing special about the Sun
  • Its just close enough to Earth to give us light
    and warmth
  • The Sun is similar to most other stars in our
    galaxy
  • A large ball of gas made mostly of hydrogen and
    helium held together by gravity.
  • The Sun is 300,000 times larger than Earth

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A. Structure of the Sun
  • 1. Core
  • The very hot (15,000,000ºC) gaseous center
  • This is where nuclear fusion occurs
  • FUSION is how the Sun makes its energy!

Hydrogen
Helium
Hydrogen
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2. The Inner Zones
  • a. Radiative Zone
  • Zone surrounding the core
  • Heat energy moves by radiation
  • b. Convective Zone
  • Around the radiative zone
  • Heat energy moves by convection

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3. The Suns Atmosphere (uppermost region of
solar gases)
  • a. Photosphere light sphere
  • visible surface of the Sun
  • what we see

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  • b. Chromosphere color sphere
  • thin layer
  • seems to glow with reddish light

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  • c. Corona crown
  • outermost layer of Suns atmosphere
  • cannot be seen with naked eye, except during
    TOTAL solar eclipse
  • huge cloud of gas that keeps the atomic particles
    from the surface from escaping into space

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  • Solar winds
  • the corona does not have a defined edge
  • gas flows outward from the corona at high speeds,
    forming solar winds
  • electrically charged atomic particles stream into
    space through holes in the corona
  • flow to distant parts of solar system

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B. Solar Activity
  • 1. Sunspots cooled regions within the
    photosphere
  • Appear darker than the areas around them

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  • 2. Prominences
  • disturbances in solar atmosphere
  • great clouds of glowing gases
  • huge arches that reach high above Suns surface

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3. Solar Flares sudden violent eruptions of
electrically charged atomic particles.
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4. Auroras (aka Northern Lights or Southern
Lights)
  • Magnetic storms in the Earths upper atmosphere
  • Solar winds attracted to Earths magnetic poles
    by the Earths magnetosphere (space around Earth
    that contains a magnetic field)
  • Electrically charged particles strike gas
    molecules in the upper atmosphere
  • Green, red, blue, or violet sheets of light are
    produced
  • Visible about 5 times per year, usually in polar
    regions

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VI. Our Solar System
  • How many stars do we have in our Solar System?
  • What bodies make up our Solar System?

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Formation of the Solar System
  • Solar system the Sun and the planets and other
    bodies that travel around the Sun
  • Solar Nebular Theory our best current idea for
    the origin of the solar system

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  • Big Bang spread matter throughout universe
  • Some matter gathered into clouds of dust and gas
  • Cloud of gas and dust that eventually developed
    into our solar system is called the SOLAR
    NEBULA
  • Solar nebula was larger than our solar system is
    now
  • Heat and pressure from force of gravity caused
    center of solar nebula to become hotter and denser

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  • While the Sun was forming in the center of the
    solar nebula, planets were forming in the outer
    regions
  • Planetesimals (small bodies of matter within the
    solar nebula) joined together through collisions
    and the force of gravity to form larger bodies
    called protoplanets
  • Protoplanets then condensed into existing planets
    and moons

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  • The four protoplanets closest to the Sun became
  • Mercury
  • Venus
  • Earth
  • Mars

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  • The next four protoplanets became
  • Jupiter
  • Saturn
  • Uranus
  • Neptune

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