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Section 19.3
Section 19.3

Today`s Powerpoint
Today`s Powerpoint

... When a cloud starts to collapse, it should fragment. Fragments then collapse on their own, fragmenting further. End product is 100’s or 1000’s of dense clumps each destined to form star, binary star, etc. Hence a cloud gives birth to a cluster of stars. ...
Evolution of Close Binary Systems
Evolution of Close Binary Systems

Sample Exam 3
Sample Exam 3

... 5) Up through the start of the 20th century, astronomers like Herschel and Kapteyn used counts of stars in the Milky Way to estimate the structure of the star system in which we live. From this evidence they concluded that A) the Sun was near the middle of a disk-like system of millions of stars. B) ...
Earth Science: Chapter 7: Stellar Evolution: Spring 2017: Student
Earth Science: Chapter 7: Stellar Evolution: Spring 2017: Student

... Greater than 20 Less than 10 million years Same as above except the mass is great enough to solar masses form a BLACK HOLE (see below) Planetary nebula: after a red giant forms material from the star is ejected and forms what looks like a nebula. The name planetary is actually misnamed by an early a ...
Slide 1 - Typepad
Slide 1 - Typepad

... lighting (referred to as "light pollution"), this scale describes what is shown when you query ECU about Magnitudes: ...
Star Classification
Star Classification

downloadable pdf - University of Florida
downloadable pdf - University of Florida

Microsoft Power Point version
Microsoft Power Point version

... But the Universe is 1.37 x 1010 yr old! Every M dwarf that was ever created is still on the main sequence!! ...
Aug 2015 supplement - Hermanus Astronomy
Aug 2015 supplement - Hermanus Astronomy

... but little is known about these first galaxies, and up to now they have just been seen as faint blobs. However, now new observations using the power of ALMA are starting to change this. Astronomers trained ALMA on galaxies that were known to be seen only about 800 million years after the Big Bang. T ...
Interstellar clouds
Interstellar clouds

(HR) Diagrams
(HR) Diagrams

... show how a star such as the sun (a G2 star while it is on the main sequence) evolves through the following stages: a. protostar (which may have formed in a Bok globule) to main sequence star b. main sequence star to red giant to helium flash c. ejecting a planetary nebula (which exposes an interior ...
The Star
The Star

... The Rubens engraving of Loyola seems to mock me as it hangs there above the spectrophotometer tracings. What would you, Father, have made of this knowledge that has come into my keeping, so far from the little world that was all the Universe you knew? Would your faith have risen to the challenge, a ...
Directed Reading A
Directed Reading A

Stellar Classification and Evolution What is a star? A cloud of gas
Stellar Classification and Evolution What is a star? A cloud of gas

... More massive stars have greater gravity, and this ____________________ the rate of fusion ...
New Stars, New Planets?
New Stars, New Planets?

The Sky is Our Laboratory
The Sky is Our Laboratory

lecture12
lecture12

... planes new position, but the old crest keeps moving out in a circle from the planes original position The same thing happens again at a later time ...
hea-www.harvard.edu
hea-www.harvard.edu

NORTH SOUTH EAST WEST
NORTH SOUTH EAST WEST

... opposition are visible all night. Saturn is in opposition on June 15. In contrast, conjunction means that two objects appear in the same place in the sky as seen from Earth. Mercury is in conjunction with the Sun on June 21. Planets in conjunction with the sun are not visible. Planet Elongations, Me ...
Ch 20 Notes Stars
Ch 20 Notes Stars

... astronomers to study stars in more detail for the ...
Star Jeopardy "Review #1
Star Jeopardy "Review #1

Main-sequence stars - Stellar Populations
Main-sequence stars - Stellar Populations

... Main-sequence stars are fusing hydrogen into helium in their cores like the Sun Luminous mainsequence stars are hot (blue) Less luminous ones are cooler (yellow or red) ...
Great Basin - 2016 NSS Convention
Great Basin - 2016 NSS Convention

... As it is visible as a faint smudge on a moonless night, and is one of the farthest objects visible to the naked eye. The Andromeda Galaxy is approaching the Sun at about 62 to 87 miles per second, so Andromeda and the Milky Way are expected to collide in perhaps 2.5 billion years. ...
Stellar Evolution
Stellar Evolution

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Ursa Major



Ursa Major /ˈɜrsə ˈmeɪdʒər/ (also known as the Great Bear and Charles' Wain) is a constellation in the northern celestial hemisphere. One of the 48 constellations listed by Ptolemy (second century AD), it remains one of the 88 modern constellations. It can be visible throughout the year in most of the northern hemisphere. Its name, Latin for ""the greater (or larger) she-bear"", stands as a reference to and in direct contrast with Ursa Minor, ""the smaller she-bear"", with which it is frequently associated in mythology and amateur astronomy. The constellation's most recognizable asterism, a group of seven relatively bright stars commonly known as the ""Big Dipper"", ""the Wagon"" or ""the Plough"" (among others), both mimicks the shape of the lesser bear (the ""Little Dipper"") and is commonly used as a navigational pointer towards the current northern pole star, Polaris in Ursa Minor. The Big Dipper and the constellation as a whole have mythological significance in numerous world cultures, usually as a symbol of the north.The third largest constellation in the sky, Ursa Major is home to many deep-sky objects including seven Messier objects, four other NGC objects and I Zwicky 18, the youngest known galaxy in the visible universe.
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