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WEDNESDAY JULY 1 TIPS FOR SUCCESS Pay attention to the objectives of each lecture Math problems Write down what you’re given, what you want, and anything else you know that is not stated explicitly Write down any/all formulas you may need Formulate a plan to get from what you have to what you want Calculations themselves don’t get you many points, setup does Answer all the parts of each question Come back to difficult questions later and don’t freak out THE SUN Core: fusion Radiative zone: energy transferred by photon collisions Convective zone: energy transferred by bulk motion Photosphere: “surface” of Sun that we see, magnetism Chromosphere: lower atmosphere with activity Corona: extends throughout Solar System Discuss: In what ways does the Sun interact with Earth? Think-Pair-Share: Sunspots appear dark because… A- they are not giving off light B- light is being absorbed in an outer layer of the Sun C- they are cooler than the surrounding regions D- the Sun’s light is being absorbed by magnetic fields E- an object is passing in front of the Sun STELLAR PROPERTIES Wien’s law: relates wavelength (color) to temperature maxT = 2.9 x 10-3 mK Stefan-Boltzmann law: relates temp, size, and luminosity L = AT4 = 4R2T4 High-mass stars use their fuel at a faster rate than low-mass stars so they live a shorter amount of time Think-Pair-Share: Star A is 3 times as hot as Star B but Star B is 15 times as luminous. Which is bigger? FUSION Stars shine because (nuclear binding) energy is released during fusion Up to a certain point, which is ________________ Nuclear fusion requires both high pressures and densities Discuss: How does fusion sustain a star? Consider self-regulation of fusion. STELLAR EVOLUTION Low-mass stars become white dwarfs within a planetary nebula Under special conditions they can become Type Ia Sne High-mass stars can become neutron stars or black holes Each new phase of stellar evolution involves collapse Discuss: A supernova explosion within 100 ly of Earth could be catastrophic for us. How would you go about determining if you were in any danger from it? GALAXIES Spirals: disk, halo, bulge Star-forming regions, “young” Elliptical: spheroidal Old “red and dead” Milky Way: large spiral Nebulae, satellites, Sgr A*, stars, ISM, globular clusters Dust causes reddening that is separate from redshift Think-Pair-Share(s): In the Venn diagram shown to the right, what is the position of each of the following characteristics? Star formation, lots of gas/dust, no gas/dust, mostly cool stars, groups of hot bright stars AGN Quasars: quasi-stellar radio sources Remnants of the early Universe Important for cosmology because they provide evidence of a young Universe and can help us determine conditions in the beginning Powered by accretion of mass from a disk onto a supermassive black hole Broad and narrow lines, radio jets, dusty torus, accretion disk, SMBH DARK MATTER Dark matter makes up 80% of all the matter in the Universe The interesting stuff is non-baryonic (not protons and neutrons and stuff that we know/understand) No lab detections yet Main astronomical evidence Flat rotation curves of spiral galaxies Gravitational lensing Bullet Cluster collision Main candidates: MACHOs and WIMPs EXPANSION Hubble’s law gives the relationship between how fast a galaxy is receding from us and its distance v = H0d z = v/c = / Space itself is expanding Hubble’s law only applies over very large distances But not too large cuz then dark energy Nearby galaxies under influence of gravity Hubble’s constant does not change throughout space but does over time Type 1a supernovae are great standard candles BIG BANG 6 main stages Big Bang: start Separation of 4 forces: gravity, strong nuclear, weak nuclear, electromagnetic Inflation: rapid growth Annihilation: matter-antimatter asymmetry Nucleosynthesis: forming of protons, neutrons, and nuclei Recombination: electrons paired with nuclei and photons escaped Discuss any problems with the Big Bang theory (not the TV show) that you can think of. EVIDENCE Observational evidence killed the steady-state theory Cosmic Microwave Background was detected in every direction Mostly smooth, some fluctuations What are these fluctuations? Created during era of recombination Discuss the significance of the tiny variations or “ripples” in the cosmic microwave background. Why is the CMB at ~3K when recombination occurred at ~3000K ? Other evidence: Hubble’s law, Olbers’s paradox, abundance of elements WRAP-UP Don’t sweat the math but also don’t skip it entirely Really don’t skip anything No make-up this time so just write stuff Use the process laid out in this lecture! Study lecture objectives Mostly conceptual Good luck! Write your paper – due Thursday