review: the life of stars

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Review : The life of Stars

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Review: The life of Stars. Activity. Evolution of Stars Please work in groups of 3-5 Hand in one worksheet per group with all the group members’ names on. Variable Stars. Eclipsing binaries (stars do not change physically, only their relative position changes) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Review: The life of Stars

Review:The life of Stars

Page 2: Review: The life of Stars

Activity

• Evolution of Stars

• Please work in groups of 3-5

• Hand in one worksheet per group with all the group members’ names on

Page 3: Review: The life of Stars

Variable Stars

• Eclipsing binaries (stars do not change physically, only their relative position changes)

• Nova (two stars “collaborating” to produce “star eruption”)

• Cepheids (stars do change physically)• RR Lyrae Stars (stars do change physically)

• Mira Stars (stars do change physically)

Page 4: Review: The life of Stars

Binary Stars

• Some stars form binary systems – stars that orbit one another– visual binaries– spectroscopic binaries– eclipsing binaries

• Beware of optical doubles– stars that happen to lie along the same line of

sight from Earth

• We can’t determine the mass of an isolated star, but of a binary star

Page 5: Review: The life of Stars

Visual Binaries

• Members are well separated, distinguishable

Page 6: Review: The life of Stars

Spectroscopic Binaries• Too distant to resolve the individual stars

• Can be viewed indirectly by observing the back-and-forth Doppler shifts of their spectral lines

Page 7: Review: The life of Stars

Eclipsing Binaries (Rare!)• The orbital plane of the pair almost edge-on to our

line of sight• We observe periodic changes in the starlight as one

member of the binary passes in front of the other

Page 8: Review: The life of Stars

Cepheids • Named after δ Cephei

• Period-Luminosity Relations

• Two types of Cepheids: – Type I: higher luminosity, metal-rich, Pop. 1– Type II: lower lum., metal-poor, Population 2

• Used as “standard candles”

• “yard-sticks” for distance measurement

• Cepeids in Andromeda Galaxies established the “extragalacticity” of this “nebula”

Page 9: Review: The life of Stars

Cepheids• Henrietta Leavitt (1908) discovers the

period-luminosity relationship for Cepheid variables

• Period thus tells us luminosity, which then tells us the distance

• Since Cepheids are brighter than RR Lyrae,they can be used to measure out to further distances

Page 10: Review: The life of Stars

Properties of Cepheids

• Period of pulsation: a few days

• Luminosity: 200-20000 suns

• Radius: 10-100 solar radii

Page 11: Review: The life of Stars

Properties of RR Lyrae Stars• Period of pulsation: less than a day

• Luminosity: 100 suns

• Radius: 5 solar radii

Page 12: Review: The life of Stars

Mira Stars

• Mira (=wonderful, lat.) [o Ceti]: sometimes visible with bare eye, sometimes faint

• Long period variable star: 332 days period

• Cool red giants

• Sometimes periodic, sometimes irregular

• some eject gas into space

Page 13: Review: The life of Stars

Spectroscopic Parallax• Assuming distant stars

are like those nearby,– from the spectrum of a

main sequence star we can determine its absolute luminosity

– Then, from the apparent brightness compared to absolute luminosity, we can determine the distance (B L / d2

again!)

• Good out to 1000 pc or so; accuracy of 25%

Page 14: Review: The life of Stars

Distance Measurements with variable stars• Extends the cosmic

distance ladder out as far as we can see Cepheids – about 50 million ly

• In 1920 Hubble used this technique to measure the distance to Andromeda (about 2 million ly)

• Works best for periodic variables

Page 15: Review: The life of Stars

Cepheids and RR Lyrae: Yard-Sticks

• Normal stars undergoing a phase of instability

• Cepheids are more massive and brighter than RR Lyrae

• Note: all RR Lyrae have the same luminosity

• Apparent brightness thus tells us the distance to them!– Recall: B L/d2