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Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Dec 16, 2015

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Rhoda Melton
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Page 1: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Introduction to Stars

Page 2: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Stellar Parallax

• Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs”

• By definition, d=1pc if p=1”, so convert d to A.U. by using trigonometry

• To calculate p for star with d given in lightyears, use d=1/p but convert ly to pc.

• Remember: 1 degree = 3600”• Note: p is half the angle the star

moves in half a year

Page 3: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Our Stellar Neighborhood

Page 4: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Scale Model

• If the Sun = a golf ball, then– Earth = a grain of sand

– The Earth orbits the Sun at a distance of one meter

– Proxima Centauri lies 270 kilometers (170 miles) away

– Barnard’s Star lies 370 kilometers (230 miles) away

– Less than 100 stars lie within 1000 kilometers (600 miles)

• The Universe is almost empty!

• Hipparcos satellite measured distances to nearly 1 million stars in the range of 330 ly

• almost all of the stars in our Galaxy are more distant

Page 5: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Luminosity and Brightness

• Luminosity L is the total power (energy per unit time) radiated by the star, actual brightness of star, cf. 100 W lightbulb

• Apparent brightness B is how bright it appears from Earth– Determined by the amount of

light per unit area reaching Earth– B L / d2

• Just by looking, we cannot tell if a star is close and dim or far away and bright

Page 6: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Brightness: simplified

• 100 W light bulb will look 9 times dimmer from 3m away than from 1m away.

• A 25W light bulb will look four times dimmer than a 100W light bulb if at the same distance!

• If they appear equally bright, we can conclude that the 100W lightbulb is twice as far away!

Page 7: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Same with stars…

• Sirius (white) will look 9 times dimmer from 3 lightyears away than from 1 lightyear away.

• Vega (also white) is as bright as Sirius, but appears to be 9 times dimmer.

• Vega must be three times farther away

• (Sirius 9 ly, Vega 27 ly)

Page 8: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Distance Determination Method

• Understand how bright an object is (L)is (L)• Observe how bright an object appears (B)appears (B)

• Calculate how far the object is away:

B L / d2

So

L/B d2 or d √L/B

Page 9: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Homework: Luminosity and Distance

• Distance and brightness can be used to find the luminosity:

L d2 B

• So luminosity and brightness can be used to find Distance of two stars 1 and 2:

d21 / d2

2 = L1 / L2 (since B1 = B2 )

i.e. d1 = (L1 / L2)1/2 d2

Page 10: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Homework: Example Question

• Two stars -- A and B, of luminosities 0.5 and 2.5 times the luminosity of the Sun, respectively -- are observed to have the same apparent brightness. Which one is more distant?

• Star A

• Star B

• Same distance

Page 11: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Homework: Example Question

• Two stars -- A and B, of luminosities 0.5 and 2.5 times the luminosity of the Sun, respectively -- are observed to have

the same apparent brightness.   How much farther away is it than the other?   

• LA/d2A = BA =BB = LB/d2

B dB = √LB/LA dA

Star B is √5=2.24 times as far as star A

Page 12: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

The Magnitude Scale• A measure of the apparent

brightness

• Logarithmic scale • Notation: 1m.4 (smaller brighter)• Originally six groupings

– 1st magnitude the brightest

– 6th magnitude is 100x dimmer

• So a difference of 5mag is a difference of brightness of 100

• Factor 2.512=1001/5 for each mag.

Page 13: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Absolute Magnitude

• The absolute magnitude is the apparent magnitude a star would have at a distance of 10 pc.

• Notation example: 2M.8

• It is a measure of a star’s actual or intrinsic brightness called luminosity

• Example: Sirius: 1M.4, Sun 4M.8– Sirius is intrinsically brighter than the Sun

Page 14: Introduction to Stars. Stellar Parallax Given p in arcseconds (”), use d=1/p to calculate the distance which will be in units “parsecs” By definition,

Finding the absolute Magnitude• To figure out absolute magnitude, we need to

know the distance to the star

• Then do the following Gedankenexperiment:– In your mind, put the star from its actual position to a

position 10 pc away– If a star is actually closer than 10pc, its absolute

magnitude will be a bigger number, i.e. it is intrinsically dimmer than it appears

– If a star is farther than 10pc, its absolute magnitude will be a smaller number, i.e. it is intrinsically brighter than it appears