red giants and white dwarfs

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A Field Guide to Stars Red Giants and White Dwarfs

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Red Giants and White Dwarfs. A Field Guide to Stars. The Solar Neighborhood. Milky Way Galaxy 100 billion stars Volume of nearly 100,000 light years across Orbits Galactic Center- 25,000 light years from Earth. Stellar Parallax. Measuring Parsecs. Parallax decreases as distance increases - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

A Field Guide to Stars

Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Page 2: Red Giants and White Dwarfs
Page 3: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

The Solar Neighborhood

Milky Way Galaxy

100 billion stars

Volume of nearly 100,000 light years across

Orbits Galactic Center- 25,000 light years from Earth

Page 4: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Stellar Parallax

Page 5: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Parallax decreases as distance increasesDistance (in parsecs)= 1 parallax (in arc

seconds)Parallax=0.5”

1/0.5= 2pcParallax=0.1” 1/0.1=10pc

One Parsec≈3.3 Light years

Measuring Parsecs

Page 6: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Our Neighbors

Proxima Centauri

Alpha Centauri Complex

0.77” parallax

270,000 AU

4.3 Light years

Page 7: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Interstellar Void

Page 8: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Luminosity and apparent brightnessLuminosity is intrinsic also called the absolute brightness

We see apparent brightness

Page 9: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Another Inverse Square LawLeaving a star, light travels through imaginary spheres of increasing radius surrounding the source.

Page 10: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Doubling the distance from a star makes it appear 22, or 4 times dimmer.Tripling makes it look 32, or 9 times more dim.

Luminosity also affects brightness.Doubling the luminosity also doubles the

energy crossing any spherical shell surrounding the star.

This doubles the apparent brightness.The apparent brightness of a star is directly

proportional to the star’s luminosity and inversely proportional to the square of its distance.

Inverse Square

Page 11: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Apparent brightness (energy flux)∞ luminosity

distance2

Okay…WHAT?

Page 12: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Two things are neededDetermine apparent brightnessStar’s distance Magnitude ScaleSecond century Greek astronomer

HipparchusClassified into six groups

Determining Luminosity

Page 13: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

The use of telescopes that could measure energy shows two important facts

The 1-6 magnitude range spans a magnitude of 100 in apparent brightness

Hipparchus used his eyes

The Magnitude Scale

Page 14: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Define a change of 5 in magnitude to correspond to exactly a factor of 100

1-6 or 7-2..Numbers in Hipparchus’s ranking are

apparent magnitudesScale is no longer limited to whole numbersMagnitudes outside of the 1-6 range are

allowed

Modern Magnitude Scale

Page 15: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Apparent Magnitude

Ranges from the Sun (-26.7) to the Hubble/Keck limit

≈5x1022

Page 16: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Measures apparent brightness when the star is seen at its actual distance from the sun

Absolute magnitude is apparent magnitude from 10 parsecs from the observer

Inverse Square (again)Star @ 100pc “moved” to 10pcDistance decreases by a factor of 10Apparent brightness increases 102 or 100

timesIts apparent magnitude would decrease by 5

Absolute Magnitude

Page 17: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Sun’s absolute magnitude is 4.83Since an increase in brightness by a factor of

100 corresponds to a reduction in a star’s magnitude by 5 units, a star with a luminosity 100 times that of the Sun has an absolute magnitude of4.83-5=-0.17

A star with .01 Solar luminosity has an absolute magnitude of4.83+5=9.83

More on the Magnitude Scale

Page 18: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

We can fill in the gaps if we realize 1 magnitude corresponds to a factor of 1001/5≈2.512, 2 magnitudes to 1002/5≈6.310 and so on.

A factor of 10 in brightness corresponds to 2.5 magnitudes.

More on the Magnitude Scale

Page 19: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Luminosity Conversion ChartCalculate the luminosity (in solar units) of a star having absolute magnitude of M. The star’s absolute magnitude differs from the Sun by (M-4.83) magnitudes, So the luminosity, L, differs from the solar luminosity by a factor of:

100 -(M-4.83)/5 or

L(solar units)= 10–((M-4.83)/2.5)

From appendix 3:

MSun=4.83, has L=100=1

Sirius A with M=1.45, has L=101.35=22 Solar Units

Page 20: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Barnard’s Star with M=13.24, has L=10-3.5 = 4.3x10-4 Solar Units.

Betelgeuse has M= -5.14 and L=9,700 suns…

More on the Magnitude Scale

Page 21: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Invert the previous formulaM=4.83-2.5 log10L

Vega: L=50M=4.83-2.5 log(50)

M=0.58Eridani: M=0.3M=4.83-2.5 log(0.3)

M=6.2

Converting Luminosity to Absolute Magnitude

Page 22: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

m=M+5 log (D/10pc)OrD= 10pc X 10((m-M)/5)

Knowing the difference m-M between apparent and absolute magnitudes is equivalent to the objects distance from us.

Apparent Luminosity, Absolute Magnitude, and Distance

Page 23: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

The star Rigel:m=0.18D=240 pcM= 0.18-5log(24)=-6.7

Apparent Luminosity, Absolute Magnitude, and Distance

Page 24: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Color and the Blackbody CurveMeasure the apparent brightness at several

different frequenciesMatch observations to appropriate blackbody

curve

Stellar Temperatures

Page 25: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Blackbody Curves

B and V filters admit different amounts of light for objects of different temperatures.

Page 26: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Between 1880 and 1920 stellar spectra was collected

No firm theories on how the lines were produced

Stars were classified by their hydrogen-line intensities

Now are classified as O, B, A, F, G, K, and M.

Spectral Classification

Page 27: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Astronomers further divided each letter into 10 subdivisions Our sun is a G2 (cooler than a G1, but hotter

than a G3)Vega: A0Barnard’s Star: M5Betelgeuse: M2

Spectral Classification

Page 28: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

With distance known and angular diameter measured, we can calculate actual radius.130pc and angular diameter of up to 0.045”Betelgeuse’s maximum radius is 630 times that

of the Sun. (Betelgeuse is a variable star).Most stars are too distant or too small to be

measured directly

Direct and Indirect Measurements

Page 29: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Stefan Boltzmann LawEnergy emitted per unit area per unit time

increases as the fourth power of the star’s surface temperature.

Large bodies radiate more energy than do small bodies at the same temperatureLuminosity α radius2 X temperature4

Radius-Luminosity-Temperature relationship:Knowledge of a star’s luminosity and

temperature can yield an estimate of the star’s radius

Radiation Laws

Page 30: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Stefan Boltzmann law: F=σT4

Area of a sphere: A=4πR2

Luminosity α radius2 X temperature4

SoLuminosity= 4π σ R2 T4

OrLuminosityα radius2 X temperature4

Estimating Stellar Radii

Page 31: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Use solar unitsL (in solar luminosities)= 3.9x1026WR (in solar radii)= 696,000 KmT (solar temperature)= 5800K

We can eliminate the constant 4π σ and rewrite the equation asL (in solar units)= R2 (in solar radii) x T4 (in

units of 5,800K)

Estimating Stellar Radii

Page 32: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

L (in solar units)= R2 (in solar radii) x T4 (in units of 5,800K)

To compute the radius, we change the formula toR=√L/T2

AldebaranSurface Temperature: 4000KLuminosity: 1.3x1023W

So the luminosity is 330 times the Sun and temperature is 4,000/5,800= 0.69R=√330/0.69R=18/0.48R=39 solar radii

Estimating Stellar Radii

Page 33: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Canopus, the second brightest star in the southern skyApparent magnitude of -0.62Parallax of 0.0104”

Distance (pc)= 1/ parallax1/0.0104= 96pc

M=m-5log(dist/10pc)M=-0.62-5log(9.6)M=-5.5

Estimating Stellar Radii

Page 34: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

M=-5.5L= 10 –(M-4.83)/2.5

L= 10-(-5.5-4.83)/2.5

L=10 -(-4.132)

L≈ 14,000Canopus spectral type is an F0: implying a

surface temperature of 7,400 K or 1.3 solar temperature

L=R2xT4

R=√L/T2

R=√14,000/1.69R≈70 solar Radii

Estimating Stellar Radii

Page 35: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Giants are any star whose radii are between 10 and 100 solar radii.

Aldebaran is red in color, so it is classified as a Red Giant.

Stars ranging up to 1000 solar radii are known as supergiant

Betelgeuse is a supergiant

Giants and Dwarfs

Page 36: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Sirius BT= 27,000 K (4.5)L= 1025W (0.025)

R=√0.025/4.52

R=0.007 solar radiiA dwarf is any star whose radius is

comparable to or smaller than the Sun (including the Sun)

Because any 27,000 K object glows blue-white, Sirius B is a white dwarf.

Giants and Dwarfs

Page 37: Red Giants and White Dwarfs

Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

Relationship exists between stellar temperature and luminosity