measuring the stars (part i). 3-d positions in space of the stars closest to our sun:

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easuring the Star (Part I)

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Page 1: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Measuring the Stars(Part I)

Page 2: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Page 3: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Nearby Star Systems in Culture & Science Fiction:

Page 4: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Page 5: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:
Page 6: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

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Page 7: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

To Measure “Radial Motion” of Stars (towards/away from us)…

…but how to determine a Star’s “Tangential” (sideways/perpendicular) Motion??

Use Doppler Shifts!

The “Fix’d Stars”……do theymove?

Of Course

They do!

(butFAR Away,their Sky Positions appear to

changeslowly!)

Page 8: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Barnard’s (“Runaway”) Star – The Largest “Proper Motion” in our sky! (~10’’/yr)

Page 9: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Anything else “Unusual” about Alpha Centauri…? It’s a Triple (Multiple) Star!

…only ~1/3 of “Sun-like” stars are Single Stars!

Page 10: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Some apparent “multiple” stars are just “Optical Doubles” (Astronomical illusions…)

Page 11: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Others really are Multiple Star Systems (“Binary Stars”, “Triples”, “Quadruples”…)

Page 12: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Some Multiple Star Systems can even Host Exoplanets!

Page 13: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Some Multiple Stars can be Visually Separated…

Page 14: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

…and some Multiples cannot be visually separated…(“Spectroscopic Binaries”)

Page 15: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Stellar Size: How Big is the Sun? (…as Stars go…)

Page 16: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

Link to Video, “Star Size Comparison”,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEheh1BH34Q

(Featuring music from “Alien”, “The Black Hole”, and “Bladerunner”)

Page 17: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:
Page 18: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

What does a picture of a Star look like, so far away? (Just a “point of light”?)

Page 19: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

How to find the size of a star that’s so far that it looks Point-like?

(AProportionality for Luminosity:

T = Star’s Surface Temperature,R = Radius of Star,L = Star’s Luminosity.

Page 20: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

What affects a star’s Apparent Brightness, besides Radius & Temp?

(

Proportionality for Apparent Brightness (“Flux”):

T = Star’s Surface Temperature,R = Radius of Star,L = Star’s Luminosity,D = Distance to the Star.

Page 21: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

The “Apparent Magnitude” Scale (as seen from Earth)

Mag. Scale “Oddities”:

• Brighter = Smaller Mag.

• Brightest = Negative Mag!

• Precision Fractional Mag.

• Scale “Logarithmic”

• App. Mag. Observer Position! (Distance)

Page 22: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

The “Absolute Magnitude” Scale (vs. True Brightness (“Luminosity”) = App. Mag. as seen from 10 parsecs away)

Page 23: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

How to tell a Star’s Temperature from its Spectrum (w/Planck Curves)

Page 24: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

A Star’s Spectral Lines actually depend upon Temperature, too! (indirectly…)

Page 25: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:
Page 26: Measuring the Stars (Part I). 3-D Positions in Space of the Stars Closest to our Sun:

(Bigger stars always hotter…?)

(Both K-type!)

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