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Name Date Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe ■ Class Adapted Reading and Study Characteristics of Stars (pages 752–759) Classifying Stars (pages 753–754) Key Concept: Characteristics used to classify stars include color, temperature, size, composition, and brightness. • A star’s color gives clues about the star’s temperature. The coolest stars appear red. The hottest stars appear blue. • Very large stars are called giant stars or supergiant stars. Our sun is a medium-sized star. Most stars are smaller than the sun. • Stars differ in their chemical make-ups. Astronomers use spectrographs to find out what elements are in a star. A spectrograph (SPEK truh graf) is a device that breaks light into colors. Scientists compare a star’s light with the light produced by different elements to find out what elements are in the star. Answer the following questions. Use your textbook and the ideas above. 1. Is the following sentence true or false? A star’s color gives clues about the star’s temperature. 2. Circle the letter of a device that breaks light into colors. a. spectrograph b. telescope c. observatory © Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 358 Name Date Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe ■ Class Adapted Reading and Study 3. Complete the concept map about characteristics used to classify stars. Characteristics used to classify stars include Color Composition Size a. b. Brightness of Stars (pages 754–755) Key Concept: The brightness of a star depends upon both its size and temperature. • Stars differ in how bright they are. A hot star shines brighter than a cool star. A large star shines brighter than a small star. • A star’s apparent brightness is the brightness you see from Earth. A hot, large star that is very far from Earth does not look very bright. But the sun looks very bright because it is so close to Earth. • A star’s absolute brightness is the brightness the star would have if all stars were the same distance from Earth. © Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 359 Name Date Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe ■ Class Adapted Reading and Study Answer the following questions. Use your textbook and the ideas on page 359. 4. Circle the letter of each characteristic that affects a star’s brightness. a. composition b. size c. temperature 5. Complete the table about the two ways that brightness can be described. Ways That Brightness Can Be Described Brightness Description a. the brightness you see from Earth b. the brightness a star would have if all stars were the same distance from Earth © Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 360 Name Date Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe ■ Class Adapted Reading and Study Measuring Distances to Stars (pages 756–757) Key Concept: Astronomers use a unit called the lightyear to measure distances between the stars. • A light-year is the distance that light travels in one year. That distance is about 9.5 million kilometers. • A light-year is a unit of distance, not time. You could also measure distance on Earth in terms of time. For example, if it takes you 1 hour to ride your bike to the mall, you could say the mall is “1 bicycle-hour” away. Answer the following questions. Use your textbook and the ideas above. 6. The distance that light travels in one year is a(an) . 7. Is the following sentence true or false? A light-year is a unit of distance, not time. Key Concept: Astronomers often use parallax to measure distances to nearby stars. • Parallax is the change in an object’s position you seem to see when you change your own position. The object does not really change position. It only seems to change because you change your position. • Astronomers use parallax. They measure how far a star seems to move when Earth moves from one side of the sun to the other. The distance the star seems to move tells an astronomer how far the star is from Earth. Answer the following questions. Use your textbook and the ideas above. 8. The change in an object’s position you seem to see when you change your own position is . © Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 361 Name Date Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe ■ Class Adapted Reading and Study 9. Circle the letter of what astronomers use parallax for. a. to measure distances to nearby stars b. to compare the brightness of stars c. to determine the elements found in stars The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram (pages 758–759) Key Concept: Astronomers use H-R diagrams to classify stars and to understand how stars change over time. • The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, or the H-R diagram, shows how the surface temperature of stars is related to their absolute brightness. • The points on the H-R diagram form a pattern. Most stars on the H-R diagram fall into a band that spreads from the top left corner of the diagram to the bottom right corner. This band is called the main sequence. Stars in the main sequence are called main-sequence stars. About 90 percent of all stars are main-sequence stars. • The brightest stars are located near the top of the H-R diagram. Stars that are not bright are located at the bottom. Answer the following questions. Use your textbook and the ideas above. 10. The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram shows how the surface temperature of stars is related to absolute . 11. Most stars are stars. © Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 362 Name Date Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe ■ Class Adapted Reading and Study 12. The picture shows a H-R diagram. The dots represent stars. Draw a line on the diagram to show about where the main sequence is. Absolute Brightness High Low High Surface Temperature © Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 363 Low