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Week #1 Q.4 (3/25) I.S. Learning Goal: I can analyze the factors used to explain the origin and evolution of the universe. Activities/Assignments: • How Big, How old, How Far Activity • Video Review Warm Up: What is the name of our galaxy? The Milky Way Homework: None Fact: Traveling at the speed of light it would still take you over 4 years to reach the Sun’s nearest neighbor star. Place the following objects in order from smallest to largest Sun Pleiades Saturn Galaxy Moon Hubble Galaxies http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/seuforum/download/CosmicSurvey2003.pdf 2 Hubble Telescope The correct order for the 7 images, from smallest to largest is: Telescope Moon - 40 feet long ~12 meters 2 thousand miles diameter ~3,200 km Saturn -75 thousand miles diameter ~121,000 km Sun - 875 thousand miles diameter ~1,408,000 km Pleiades- 60 trillion miles across the cluster ~1x1014km Galaxy-600 thousand trillion miles across ~1x1018km Hubble galaxies-600 thousand trillion miles across ~1 x 1021km 3 Place the following objects in order from closest to farthest Sun Saturn Pleiades Galaxy Moon Hubble Galaxies 4 Hubble Telescope The correct order for the 7 images, from closest to farthest: Telescope - 350miles above Earth ~560km Moon - 250 thousand miles ~402,000km Sun - 93 million miles ~1.5x108km Saturn -790million miles~1.3x109 km Pleiades- 2400trillion miles ~2.4x1015km Galaxy-200 million trillion miles ~2x 1020km Hubble galaxies-30 billion trillion miles across~3x1022km 5 Place the following objects in order from youngest to oldest Sun Saturn Pleiades Galaxy Moon Hubble Galaxies 6 Hubble Telescope The correct order for the 7 images, from youngest to oldest Telescope - a few years (1990) Pleiades ~80 million years Moon ~4.5 billion years Saturn ~4.5 billion years Sun ~4.5 billion years Galaxy ~10 billion years Hubble galaxies ~10 billion years 7 Week #1 Q.4 (3/26-3/27) I.S. Learning Goal: I can analyze the factors used to explain the origin and evolution of the universe. Activities/Assignments: • Complete How Big, How old, How Far Activity • Video Review + handout • Notes • Acrostic Poem Warm Up: When you look at distances in space and age what are your thoughts? Explain. Homework: New Notebook Monday Fact: There are three golf balls on the Moon (left by Apollo 14 astronaut Alan Shepard in 1971.) EXPLORING SPACE The Universe: The Vast Reaches of Space- video plus handout 9 Life Cycle of Stars 10 http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/teachers/lessons/xray_spectra/background-lifecycles.html - video clip *brainpop http://www.brainpop.com/science/space/lifecycleofstars/ 11 Week #1 Q.4 (3/28) I.S. Learning Goal: I can analyze the factors used to explain the origin and evolution of the universe. Activities/Assignments: • Complete notes – Complete back of video handout questions • Acrostic Poem Warm Up + reflection What are main sequence stars? Explain. Homework: New Notebook Monday Fact: If you would place a pinhead sized piece of the Sun on the Earth you would die from standing within 145 km (90 miles) from it. Protostar-a young star which is in the early stages of formation, before it reaches the main sequence stage A star-forming region, 1,000 light-years away in Aquila. About 100 protostars have been found in this stellar nursery, together with 600 other objects that will eventually pass through the protostar stage. The protostellar phase is an early stage in the process of star formation. Lasts about 100,000 years (depending on size of star) 13 Protostar http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CkrJq2j9yGM Stars http://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/other-shows/videos/how-the-universe-works-big-stars.htm 14 Clusters of young stars- large clouds of molecular gas where stars are born, they form in groups or clusters Pleiades • A relatively young star cluster, also known as the Seven Sisters and Messier 45. The cluster contains hundreds of stars, of which only a handful are commonly visible to the unaided eye. The stars in the Pleiades are thought to have formed together around 100 million years ago, making them 1/50th the age of our sun, and they lie about 130 parsecs (425 light years) away. 15 General Information about the sun by far the largest object in the solar system. more than 99.8% of the total mass of the Solar System (Jupiter contains most of the rest). at present, about 70% hydrogen and 28% helium by mass everything else ("metals") amounts to less than 2%. This changes slowly over time as the Sun converts hydrogen to helium in its core. The Sun appears to have been active for 4.6 billion years and has enough fuel to go on for another five billion years or so. At the end of its life, the Sun will start to fuse helium into heavier elements and begin to swell up, ultimately growing so large that it will swallow the Earth. After a billion years as a red giant, it will suddenly collapse into a white dwarf -- the final end product of a star like ours. It may take a trillion years to cool off completely 16 Temperature of Sun ☼ surface = 5778 Kcore of sun = 15.7×10K • Red Giant (example: Betelgeuse) A red giant is a relatively old star whose diameter is about 100 times bigger than it was originally, and had become cooler (the surface temperature is under 6,500 K). They are usually orange in color. Betelgeuse is a red giant. It is about 20 times as massive as the Sun about 14,000 times brighter than the Sun, and about 600 light-years from Earth. 17 Supernova • One of the most energetic explosive events known is a supernova. These occur at the end of a star's lifetime, when its nuclear fuel is exhausted and it is no longer supported by the release of nuclear energy. If the star is particularly massive, then its core will collapse and in so doing will release a huge amount of energy. This will cause a blast wave that ejects the star's envelope into interstellar space. The result of the collapse may be, in some cases, a rapidly rotating neutron star that can be observed many years later as a radio pulsar. Supernova http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=how+the+universe+works+supernovas&FORM=AWVR#view=deta il&mid=ED1CA3C62F58B8219437ED1CA3C62F58B8219437 How long does a supernova last? The explosion itself is over within a matter of seconds. But the envelope of the dying star is expelled with such speed that, when it ploughs into the interstellar gas, it is heated to millions of degrees and remain bright in 18 X-rays for tens of thousands of years. Planetary Nebula http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=how+the+universe+works+Planetary+Nebula&qs=n&form=QBVR&pq=how+the+universe+works+pla netary+nebula&sc=0-33&sp=-1&sk=#view=detail&mid=48CB29E3B8B86EEC8E8748CB29E3B8B86EEC8E87 • Forms when a star can no longer support itself by fusion reactions in its center. The gravity from the material in the outer part of the star takes its inevitable toll on the structure of the star, and forces the inner parts to condense and heat up. The high temperature central regions drive the outer half of the star away in a brisk stellar wind, lasting a few thousand years. When the process is complete, the remaining core remnant is uncovered and heats the now distant gases and causes them to glow. http://www.noao.edu/jacoby/abell_35.html 19 The Ring Nebula (M57) in Lyra. Hubble Telescope image White Dwarf • A white dwarf is a small, very dense, hot star that is made mostly of carbon. These faint stars are what remains after a red giant star loses its outer layers. Their nuclear cores are depleted. They are about the size of the Earth (but tremendously heavier)! They will eventually lose their heat and become a cold, dark black dwarf. Our sun will someday turn into a white dwarf and then a black dwarf. 20 • • • A hypothetical end point of evolution for a degenerate star, either a white dwarf or a neutron star, after it has cooled down to the extent that it can no longer shine, even dimly. A black dwarf is composed of cold, degenerate matter – degenerate electron matter (in the case of a white dwarf) or degenerate baryon matter (in the case of a neutron star). It's thought that about a trillion years are needed for a star to cool to the point at which it becomes a black dwarf. Black Dwarf Concept art of a black dwarf against a background field of stars. Art © David Darling 21 Black Hole • Formed when a massive star collapses from its own gravity, black holes have such a strong pull of gravity that not even light can escape from them. • Today's scientists believe that a black hole is the end product in the lifecycle of a giant star. If this star is three or four times as massive as our own sun, even after it has exhausted all its fuel, then it can collapse under its own gravity. Black Hole: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfG2-FFL6fY 22 Neutron Star Are compact objects that are created in the cores of massive stars during supernova explosions. The core of the star collapses, and crushes together every proton with a corresponding electron turning each electron-proton pair into a neutron. The neutrons, however, can often stop the collapse and remain as a neutron star. Neutron stars are fascinating objects because they are the most dense objects known. They are only about 10 miles in diameter, yet they are more massive than the Sun. One sugar cube of neutron star material weighs about 100 million tons, which is about as much as a mountain. 23 Use the words Acrostic Poem or Name Poem L I F E O F S T A R S Create a word or sentence explaining the words life of stars. *Must summarize the notes *Include a picture with color *Include 3-5 sentences explaining the Acrostic Poem Spelling out "fear"... Frightening Eerie and strange Anxiety rises Ready to flee 24