properties of stars

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Properties of Stars

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Properties of Stars. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0RT4nFJEFM. Star Color – the color of a star is a clue to its temperature The coolest stars are red The medium stars are yellow The hottest stars are blue. Measuring Distance to Stars. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Properties  of Stars

Properties of Stars

Page 2: Properties  of Stars

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0RT4nFJEFM

Page 3: Properties  of Stars

• Star Color – the color of a star is a clue to its temperature

a. The coolest stars are red b. The medium stars are yellowc. The hottest stars are blue

Page 4: Properties  of Stars

Measuring Distance to Stars

• Parallax – using the location of a star at two different times to calculate its distance from Earth– The nearest stars have the

largest parallax and the farthest stars have the smallest parallax

Page 5: Properties  of Stars

Measuring Distance to Stars

• Light-year – the distance light travels in one year (9.5 trillion kilometers)

• We use this when determining astronomical distances since miles and kilometers would be way too small of a number

• The next closest star after our sun, Proxima Centauri, is 4.3 light years away from our sun

Page 6: Properties  of Stars
Page 7: Properties  of Stars

Stellar Brightness• Apparent magnitude – measure of how bright a

star appears from Earth• This varies due to the star’s temperature, size, and distance

away from Earth

• Absolute magnitude – measure of how bright a star actually is

• To get a stars absolute magnitude, astronomers have to compare all stars at an equivalent distance

Page 8: Properties  of Stars

These three stars can have the same absolute magnitude when their sizes, temperatures, and distances from Earth are taken into account

Page 9: Properties  of Stars

Comparison of Apparent Magnitude and Absolute Magnitude of Stars

Name Distance (light years)

Apparent Magnitude*

Absolute Magnitude*

Sun N/A -26.7 5.0

Alpha Centauri 4.27 0.0 4.4

Sirius 8.70 -1.4 1.5

Arcturus 36 -0.1 -0.3

Betelgeuse 520 0.8 -5.5

Deneb 1600 1.3 -6.9

The more negative, the brighter and the more positive, the dimmer

Astronomers estimate that there are 200-400 billion stars in our Milky Way Galaxy, but we can only see about 2,500 visible to the naked eye on Earth

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Life Cycle of a Star1. Stars begin as large clouds of gas and dust called

nebula2. The nebula then contracts and shrinks and its

temperature increases– This process may take ~ 1 million years

3. Now the star is a protostar – still developing , large, red object – It can’t be classified as a star yet because it does not undergo

fusion

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Page 13: Properties  of Stars

1. A star becomes a main-sequence star when fusion begins– Stars at this stage have a delicate balance between

gravity pushing inward and the gas pressure pushing outward

• Stable, main-sequence stars have varying lifespans:– Large, blue stars may only last a few million years– Small, red stars may last hundreds of billions of years

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Page 15: Properties  of Stars

• As a star begins the end of its lifecycle it will become a red giant– Red giants are red in color because they are cooler– Red giants are HUGE in size compared to when they

were a main-sequence star

Page 16: Properties  of Stars

• When a small to medium sized star dies it becomes a white dwarf– White dwarf – a small, cool star near the end of its life

• When a large star dies it becomes a supernova– Supernova – an exploding star– When the largest stars explode, they can form black

holes

Page 17: Properties  of Stars

Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

• H-R Diagram – shows the relationship between the absolute magnitude and temperature of stars