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Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486

Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

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Page 1: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Solar Storm Oct ‘03

29 Oct ‘03

Complex 486

Page 2: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03
Page 3: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Page 4: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Class 16 : Other stars

Beyond the solar system – other stars The distance to other stars. Properties of other stars. The Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagram.

Page 5: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

I : The distance to other stars

Recap… 1 AU = 150 million km.

How far are the nearest stars? Look at brightness…

Brightness of something drops with the square of the distance.

Brightest stars are about 1011 times fainter that the Sun…

If same luminosity, this means that they are about 300,000 times further away (i.e. 300,000 AU, or about 5 light years).

Page 6: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03
Page 7: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Stellar parallax

Parallax: Stars appear to

wobble as the Earth moves around Sun.

Can use this to measure distance to stars (since Earth-Sun distance known well).

Page 8: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

If star wobbles with amplitude of 1 arc-second (1/3600th of a degree), then it is at distance of 1 parsec (definition of parsec).

1 pc = 3.26 light years. In general,

Find that nearest star is indeed about 1.2 parsecs (250,000 AU; 4 light years) from us.

Method works out to 1000 pc.

)arcsec(

1)pc(

wobble

D

Page 9: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

II : Stellar properties

Stars have various… Luminosities

Feeble star = 0.0001 L.

Powerful star = 50,000 L.

Masses (~0.1 to 100 M) Biggest stars usually the most luminous.

Colors Depends on surface temperature of star. Cool star (RED) = 3000 K. Hot star (BLUE) = 30,000 K.

Page 10: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Beta Cygni (double star, also called Albireo)

“topaz & sapphire”

Page 11: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Don’t bother copying…

Stellar temperature/color also gives rise to “Spectral Classes.” O (> 30,000 K). B (10,000 – 30,000 K). A (7,000 – 10,000 K). F (6,000 – 7,000 K). G (5,000 – 6,000 K) – the sun! K (4,000 – 5,000 K). M (< 4,000 K).

Page 12: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

Knowing luminosity and temperature, we can calculate the radius using the “Stephan-Boltzmann law”:

L = 4R2T4

- or -(L/L) = (R/R)2(T/T)4.

Important points – = 5.6710-8 W/m2/K4 is a number called the

Stephan-Boltzmann constant. Luminosity increases very rapidly with temperature

(2 T gives 16 L) and radius (2 R gives 4 L).

Page 13: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

II : The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram

Very important plot in astronomy. Plot of luminosity against temperature

for stars Find that stars fall into definite groups…

Page 14: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03
Page 15: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03
Page 16: Solar Storm Oct ‘03 29 Oct ‘03 Complex 486. Christie Ponder, Houston, Oct 29 ‘03

The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram