Louis Lackey
Day 12 Notes
Chapter 11- Surveying the stars
Section 11.1- Properties of Stars
We measure
luminosities by the amount of light passing through each unit of area depends
on the inverse square of its distance from the star. Brightness of a star
depends on distance and luminosity. Luminosity is the amount of power a star
radiates. Energy per second is Watts. Apparent brightness is the amount of
starlight that reaches earth, energy per second per square meter. You divide
luminosity by area to get brightness. Brightness=Luminosity/4pi(distance)^2
Apparent
positions of stars shift by about an arc second as earth orbits the sun. We use
parallax and trigonometry to measure the distance of stars. We measure stellar
temperatures using the color spectrum. We can only measure mass in binary
systems by measuring eclipses, because of orbits and gravity.
Section 11.2 Patterns among stars
A
Hertzsprung russel diagram organizes stars based on temperature and luminosity.
Most stars lie on the main sequence. Stars with lower T and higher L than main
sequence stars must have larger radii-Giants and Supergiants. Lower T/L must be
smaller-White Dwarfs. There are five classes of stars-
I-supergiant
II-Bright giant
III-giant
IV-Subgiant
V-Main Sequence
A stars
full classification includes spectral type (OBAFGKM), temperature, color, luminosity,
and radius
Main
sequence stars are fusing H into He.
Luminosity-brightness distance
Temperature-color and spectral type
Mass-period and separation of binary orbit
Mass and
lifetime- the sun is halfway through its 10 billion year life. Larger stars
burn faster and have shorter lives, smaller longer.
Stars that
have finished fusing H are off the main sequence. They become larger and
redder. After fusion has ceased they become white dwarfs.
1 comment:
Louis,
good work.
Now you have to read section 11.3 also.
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