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Solar System http://atropos.as.arizona.edu/aiz/teaching/nats102/mario/solar_system.html Any model of Solar System formation must explain the following facts: 1. All the orbits of the planets are prograde (i.e. if seen from above the North pole of the Sun they all revolve in a counter-clockwise direction). 2. All the planets (except Pluto) have orbital planes that are inclined by less than 6 degrees with respect to each other (i.e. all in the same plane). 3. Terrestrial planets are dense, rocky and small, while jovian planets are gaseous and large. ▪ Solar system formed about 4.6 billion year ago, when gravity pulled together low-density cloud of interstellar gas and dust (called a nebula) http://ircamera.as.arizona.edu/NatSci102/ NatSci102/lectures/solarsysform.htm ▪ Initially the cloud was about several light years across. A small overdensity in the cloud caused the contraction to begin and the overdensity to grow, thus producing a faster contraction ▪ Initially, most of the motions of the cloud particles were random, yet the nebula had a net rotation. As collapse proceeded, the rotation speed of the cloud gradually increased due to conservation of angular momentum. ▪ Gravitational collapse was much more efficient along the spin axis, so the rotating ball collapsed into thin disk with a diameter of 200 AU (0.003 light years) (twice Pluto's orbit), aka solar nebula with most of the mass concentrated near the center. ▪ As the cloud contracted, its gravitational potential energy was converted into kinetic energy of the individual gas particles. Collisions between particles converted this energy into heat (random motions). The solar nebula became hottest near the center where much of the mass was collected to form the protosun (the cloud of gas that became Sun). ▪ At some point the central temperature rose to 10 million K. The collisions among the atoms were so violent that nuclear reactions began: the Sun was born as a star, containing 99.8% of the total mass ▪ Around the Sun a thin disk gives birth to the planets, moons, asteroids and comets. ▪ The great temperature differences between the hot inner regions and the cool outer regions of the disk determined what of condensates were available for planet formation at each location from the center. The inner nebula was rich in heavy solid grains and deficient in ices and gases. The outskirts are rich in ice, H, and He (gas even at very low temp.). Solar System Asteroid belt situated between Mars and Jupiter, contains millions of asteroids. Kuiper belt, beyond Neptune, much larger; In addition to asteroids it is the source of short-period comets and contains dwarf planets About 4.5 billion years ago, the Earth’s moon is believed to have been formed from material ejected when a collision occurred between a Mars-size object and the Earth. Jupiter is the biggest planet in terms of mass and volume. Mercury is the smallest. Asteroids and comets are both celestial bodies orbiting our Sun, and they both can have unusual orbits, sometimes straying close to Earth or the other planets. They are both “leftovers” — made from materials from the formation of our Solar System 4.5 billion years ago Asteroids consist of metals and rocky material. Those of size less than 300 km have irregular shape because their gravity is too weak to compress them into spheres. Comets are irregular objects a few kilometres across comprising frozen gases (ice), rocky materials, and dust. Observable comets travel around the Sun in sharply elliptical orbits with periods ranging from a few years to thousands of years. As they draw near to the Sun the gases in the comet are vaporized, forming the distinctive comet tail that can be millions of kilometres long and always points away from the Sun. Stars Stars initially form when gravity causes the gas in a nebula to condense. As the atoms move towards one another, they lose gravitational PE that is converted into KE. This raises the temperature of the atoms which then form a protostar. When the mass of the protostar is large enough, the temperature and pressure at the centre will be sufficient for hydrogen to fuse into helium, with the release of very large amounts of energy – the star has “ignited”. The stability of a star depends on the equilibrium between two opposing forces. The equilibrium depends on the gravitation which can collapse the star and the radiation pressure which can make the star expand. This equilibrium is gained through nuclear fusion which provides the energy the star needs to keep it hot so that the star's radiation pressure is high enough to oppose gravitational contraction. When this is balanced the star is in a state of hydrostatic equilibrium and will remain stable for up to billions of years. This applies to all layers of the Sun. Gravity pulls outer layers in, gas and radiation pressure pushes them out. It is pretty hot at the center!!!! The fusing of hydrogen into helium takes up the majority of a star’s lifetime and is the reason why there are far more main sequence stars than those in other phases of their life-cycle. At the beginning of a star's life cycle the star consists mainly of hydrogen; 98% hydrogen. All stars follow a simple “hydrogen burning”: hydrogen fuses into helium, in order to maintain an equilibrium between gravity and pressure. As the hydrogen is used up the star will eventually undergo changes that will move it from the main sequence. During these changes the colour of the star alters as its surface temperature rises or falls and it will change size accordingly. The original mass of material in the star determines how the star will change during its lifetime. Nuclear Fusion within stars: “hydrogen burning”: hydrogen fuses into helium. Stars consist mainly of hydrogen, which is used for the fusion reactions that produce almost all of their energy. For Sun-like stars the process advances through the proton–proton chain 1. Two protons fuse to form a deuterium, and releases a positron and a neutrino. Each positron is annihilated to create 2γ ray photons. 2. The deuterium nucleus fuses with another proton, and produces a helium-3 nucleus. 3. For stars of greater than four solar masses undergo CNO cycle. Again, four protons are used to undergo the fusion process; carbon-12 is both one of the fuels and one of the products. Two positrons, two neutrinos and three gamma-ray photons are also emitted in the overall process. Two helium-3 nuclei fuse to produce the helium-4 nucleus. Two protons are released Story about our sun Thus, in order to produce a helium nucleus, four hydrogen nuclei are used in total (six are used in the fusion reactions and two are generated). The fusing of hydrogen into helium takes up the majority of a star’s lifetime and is the reason why there are far more main sequence stars than those in other phases of their life-cycle. • Star is a massive body of plasma/gas held together by gravity, with fusion going on at its center, giving off electromagnetic radiation. There is an equilibrium between radiation/gas pressure and gravitational pressure called hydrostatic equilibrium Groups of stars Despite the difficulties in assessing whether stars exist singly or in groups of two or more, it is thought that around fifty per cent of the stars nearest to the Sun are part of a star system comprising two or more stars. Binary stars consist of two stars that rotate about a common centre of mass. They are important in astrophysics because their interactions allow us to measure properties that we have no other way of investigating. For example, careful measurement of the motion of the stars in a binary system allows their masses to be estimated. • Clusters: Gravitationally bound system of galaxies/stars. • Stellar cluster is a group of stars held together by gravitation in same region of space, created roughly at the same time from the same nebula. Open clusters consist of up to several hundred stars that are younger than ten billion years and may still contain some gas and dust. They are located within our galaxy, the Milky Way, and so lie within a single plane. Globular clusters contain many more stars and are older than eleven billion years and, therefore, contain very little gas and dust. There are 150 known globular clusters lying just outside the Milky Way in its galactic halo. Globular clusters are essentially spherically shaped. The Pleiades is a stellar cluster of about 500 stars that can be seen with the naked eye The galactic halo is an extended, roughly spherical component of a galaxy which extends beyond the main, visible component. Several distinct components of galaxies comprise the halo: the galactic spheroid (stars) the galactic corona (hot gas, i.e. a plasma) the dark matter halo. Constellation is a pattern formed by stars that are in the same general direction when viewed from the Earth. Such stars are not held together by gravity. Nebula Regions of intergalactic cloud of dust and gas are called nebulae. As all stars are “born” out of nebulae, these regions are known as stellar nurseries. There are two different origins of nebulae. The first origin of nebulae occurred in the “matter era” around 380 000 years after the Big Bang. Dust and gas clouds were formed when nuclei captured electrons electrostatically and produced the hydrogen atoms that gravitated together. The second origin of nebulae is from the matter which has been ejected from a supernova explosion. The Crab Nebula is a remnant of such a supernova. Other nebulae can form in the final, red giant, stage of a low mass star such as the Sun. • Galaxy is a huge group of stars, dust, and gas held together by gravity, often containing billions of stars, measuring many light years across. Some galaxies exist in isolation but the majority of them come in clusters containing from a few dozen to a few thousand members. The Milky Way is part of a cluster of about 30 galaxies called the “Local Group” which includes Andromeda and Triangulum. Regular clusters consist of a concentrated core and are spherical in shape. Irregular clusters have no apparent shape and a lower concentration of galaxies within them. The Andromeda galaxy with Since the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope it has been observed that even two smaller satellite galaxies. larger structures, superclusters, form a network of sheets and filaments; approximately 90% of galaxies can be found within these. In between the clusters there are voids that are apparently empty of galaxies. Spiral galaxies the most common class of galaxies (both The Milky Way and Andromeda). They have a flat rotating disc-shape with spiral arms spreading out from a central galactic bulge that contains the greatest density of stars. It is increasingly speculated that, at the centre of the galactic bulge, there is a black hole. The spiral arms contain many young blue stars and a great deal of dust and gas. Other galaxies are elliptical in shape, being ovoid or spherical – these contain much less gas and dust than spiral galaxies; they are thought to have been formed from collisions between spiral galaxies. Irregular galaxies are shapeless and may have been stretched by the presence of other massive galaxies – the Milky Way appears to be having this effect on some nearby dwarf galaxies. Astronomical distances Resulting from the huge distances involved in astronomical measurements, some unique, non-SI units have been developed. This avoids using large powers of ten and allows astrophysicists to gain a feel for relative sizes and distances. 1 light-second = (3.0 × 10 m/s)(1.0 s) = 3.0 × 108 m = 3.0 × 105 km 1 light-minute = 18 × 106 km 1 light-year (ly) 1 ly = 9.46 × 1015 m ≈ l013 km. The Earth—Moon distance is 384,000 km = 1.28 light-seconds. The Earth—Sun distance is 150,000,000 km = 8.3 light-minutes. The astronomical unit (AU): the average distance between the Sun and the Earth. It is really only useful when dealing with the distances of planets from the Sun. 1 AU= 1.50 × 10 11 m ≈ 8 light minutes 1 parsec (pc): This is the most commonly used unit of distance in astrophysics. 1 pc= 3.26 ly = 3.09 × 10 16 m Distances between nearby stars are measured in pc, while distances between distant stars within a galaxy will be in kiloparsecs (kpc), and those between galaxies in megaparsecs (Mpc) or gigaparsecs (Gpc). Parallax Method relies on the apparent movement of the nearby star against the background of further stars as the earth orbits the sun. • It is the most direct measure of distance. • two apparent positions of a close star with respect to position of distant stars as seen by an observer in both January and July are compared and recorded to find angle p • tan 𝑝 = 𝑆𝑢𝑛 − 𝐸𝑎𝑟𝑡ℎ 𝑑𝑖𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑒 1𝐴𝑈 = 𝑆𝑢𝑛 − 𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑟 𝑑𝑖𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑒 𝑑 For small angles: sin p tan p p 1𝐴𝑈 𝑑= 𝑝 when talking about stars, parallax is very, very small number. Parallaxes are expressed in seconds. p rad 180 60 60 p sec d m 1 648000 1 → p rad p sec 1 149597870691 648000 3.08 1016 m p sec p sec d pc 1 p sec 1 AU = 149597870691 m 1 pc = 3.09 X 1016 m “Parsec” is short for parallax arcsecond ‘One parsec is a distance corresponding to a parallax of one arc second' • Even the nearest star has a tiny parallax! ► First measured in 1838 ► The closest bright star Alpha Centauri 4.3 light-year 0.75 pc The farther away an object gets, the smaller its shift. Eventually, the shift is too small to see. Parallax has its limits… http://www.astronomy.ohiostate.edu/~pogge/Ast162/Movie s/parallax.gif There is a limit to the distance that can be measured using stellar parallax – parallax angles of less than 0.01 arcsecond are difficult to measure from the surface of the Earth because of the absorption and scattering of light by the atmosphere. Turbulence in the atmosphere also limits the resolution because it causes stars to “twinkle”. 1 Using the parallax equation, gives a maximum range of 𝑑 = 0.01 = 100 pc In 1989, the satellite Hipparcos (an acronym for High Precision Parallax Collecting Satellite) was launched by the European Space Agency (ESA). Being outside the atmosphere, Hipparcos was able to measure the parallaxes of 118 000 stars with an accuracy of 0.001 arcsecsond (to distances 1000 pc); its mission was completed in 1993. Gaia, Hipparcos’s successor, was launched in 2013 and is charged with the task of producing an accurate three-dimensional map showing the positions of about a billion stars in the Milky Way. This is about one per cent of the total number of stars in the galaxy! Gaia is able to resolve a parallax angle of 10 microarcsecond measuring stars at a distance of 100 000 pc. limits because of small parallaxes: d ≤ 100 pc from Earth d ≤ 1000 pc from Hipparcos d ≤ 100 000 pc from Gaia To understand the nature, to interpret many beautiful phenomena you have to have a tool. We are introducing something that we know all about and then we’ll compare the nature with that ideal case!!!!!!! A black body is a theoretical object that absorbs 100% of the radiation that that is incident uponhas them it. found Because In practice no material been to there is no reflection or transmission it appears perfectly black. in its absorb all incoming radiation, but carbon graphite absorbsas allperfect but about 3%. Itofis radiation, emitting the Such bodies wouldform also behave emitters a perfect emitterpossible of radiation. maximumalso amount of radiation at their temperature. This type of radiation consists of every wavelength possible but containing different amounts of energy at each wavelength for a particular temperature. • Black bodies in thermal equilibrium emit energy to balance the energy they absorb and remain at a constant temperature. The only parameter that determines how much EM radiation the black body radiates for the given wavelength is its temperature. That is why the radiation emitted by an blackbody is often called thermal radiation. The hotter the blackbody, the more EM radiation at all wavelengths. • Black body emits energy according to Planck’s and Wien’s law Although stars are not perfect black-bodies they are capable of emitting and absorbing all wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation. Blackbody radiation Planck's Law predicts the radiation of a blackbody at different temperatures. It gives intensity of radiation as a function of wavelength. It depends only upon the temperature of the black body. • The hotter the blackbody the more energy emitted per unite area at all wavelengths. Stars’ and planets’ radiation spectrum is approximately the same as black-body radiation. Except for their surfaces, stars behave as blackbodies. Wien’s law: Wavelength at which the intensity of the radiation is a maximum λmax, is: 2.9×10-3 max (m) T(K) • The peak emission from the blackbody moves to shorter wavelengths as the temperature increases (Wien’s law) Note that the peak shifts with temperature. Luminosity of a star is the total power radiated by a star. (total energy per second) If we regard stars as black body, then luminosity is L = A σT4 (W) Stefan-Boltzmann’s law A is surface area of the star, T surface temperature (K), σ is Stefan-Boltzmann constant. When we assume that a star is spherical we can use this equation in the form: L = 4πR2σT4 (W) R is the radius of the star (Apparent) brightness (b) is the power from the star received per square meter of the Earth’s surface L b = 4π𝑑2 (W/m2) L is luminosity of the star; d its distance from the Earth Can be measured, for example, by using a telescope and a charge-coupled device ? IB Photometer!!! Internet Some data for the variable star Betelgeuse are given below. Average apparent brightness = 1.6 × 10–7 Wm–2 Radius = 790 solar radii Earth–Betelgeuse separation = 138 pc The luminosity of the Sun is 3.8 × 10 26 W and it has a surface temperature of 5800 K. (a) Calculate the distance between the Earth and Betelgeuse in metres. (b) Determine, in terms of the luminosity of the Sun, the luminosity of Betelgeuse. (c) Calculate the surface temperature of Betelgeuse. For a star, state the meaning of the following terms: (a) (i) Luminosity (ii) Apparent brightness (i) The luminosity is the total power emitted by the star. (ii) The apparent brightness is the incident power per unit area received at the surface of the Earth. (b) The spectrum and temperature of a certain star are used to determine its luminosity to be approximately 6.0×1031 W. The apparent brightness of the star is 1.9×10-9 Wm-2. These data can be used to determine the distance of the star from Earth. Calculate the distance of the star from Earth in parsec. L L b= → d = = 4π𝑑2 4π𝑏 6.0 × 1031 = 5.0 × 1019 𝑚 −9 4𝜋 × 1.9 × 10 5.0 × 1019 5.0 × 1019 𝑏 = 5.0 × 10 𝑚 = 𝑙𝑦 = 𝑝𝑐 = 1623 𝑝𝑐 9.46 × 1015 3.26 × 9.46 × 1015 19 𝑏 ≈ 1600 𝑝𝑐 (c)Distances to some stars can be measured by using the method of stellar parallax. (i) Outline this method. (ii) Modern techniques enable the measurement from Earth’s surface of stellar parallax angles as small as 5.0 × 10–3 arcsecond. Calculate the maximum distance that can be measured using the method of stellar parallax. (i) The angular position of the star against the background of fixed stars is measured at six month intervals. The distance d is then found using the relationship d = 1/p 𝑖𝑖 𝑑 = 1 = 200 𝑝𝑐 5 × 10−3 Suppose I observe with my telescope two red stars A and B that are part of a binary star system. Star A is 9 times brighter than star B. What can we say about their relative sizes and temperatures? Since both are red (the same color), the spectra peak at the same wavelength. By Wien's law 2.9×10-3 max (m) T(K) L = 4π R2 σ T4 then they both have the same temperature. (W) Star A is 9 times brighter and as they are the same distance away from Earth. Star A is 9 times more luminous: LA 4RA2TA4 LB 4RB2TB4 RA2 9 2 RB RA 3 RB So, Star A is three times bigger than star B. Suppose I observe with my telescope two stars, C and D, that form a binary star pair. ▪ Star C has a spectral peak at 350 nm - deep violet ▪ Star D has a spectral peak at 700 nm - deep red What are the temperatures of the stars? By Wien's law peak 3 2.9 10 T 3 3 2.9 10 2.9 10 TC 8300 K peak 350 10 9 peak in m T in K 3 3 2.9 10 2.9 10 TD 4150 K peak 350 10 9 If both stars are equally bright (which means in this case they have equal luminosities since the stars are part of a pair the same distance away), what are the relative sizes of stars C and D? LC 4RC2 TC4 LD 4RD2 TD4 RC2 83004 RC2 4 1 2 2 RD 41504 RD2 RD2 16 RC2 RD 4 RC Star C is 4 times smaller than star D. The Sun, our favorite star! The Sun is the basis for all of our knowledge of stars. Why? WE CAN SEE IT REALLY WELL. Today we will take a journey to the center of the Sun, starting with what we can see… …and ending up deep in the core. Overview of Solar Structure Main Parts: The Sun is made of mostly HYDROGEN and HELIUM The Corona Mass is ejected into space as the solar wind • Outer layer of the Sun • Millions of degrees but very diffuse • Extends millions of kilometers into space • Hot and energetic, gives off lots of x rays! The solar wind streams off of the Sun in all directions at speeds of about 400 km/s (about 1 million miles per hour). The source of the solar wind is the Sun's hot corona. The temperature of the corona is so high that the Sun's gravity cannot hold on to it. • The Sun has intense magnetic fields • The magnetic fields release energy from the Sun • Release seen in sunspots, flares, coronal mass ejections & other phenomena Flares This twisting leads to the loopy structures we see! BE BEAMAZED! AMAZED! Earth to scale. Yes, really. The Sun’s magnetic fields create sunspots The Sun has an 11-year solar cycle Maximum Minimum Visible Ultraviolet Ultraviolet Sunspots! -284 -174 304nm nm nm Ultraviolet 195 nm temperature is about 5800 K… • Remember how the temperature and color of stars are related? The temperature of our Sun gives it its yellowish color! Our Sun is really yellowish green, but our atmosphere absorbs and scatters some of the blue light. Sunshine = Energy from Fusion E= Energy 2 mc Mass Speed of Light Speed of light is BIG-- so a little mass can turn into a LOT of energy! review: • Gravity compresses and heats the center of the sun • At the core nuclear reactions take place • The Sun is a giant nuclear reactor • Energy flows from the core outward, but how does it get out and end up as sunshine? The next two layers of the Sun are all about getting the energy being made in the core out into space! It takes a lot of time, but we get it eventually. How does energy get from one place to another? 1. 2. 3. Hot stuff rises…Cool stuff sinks! BOILING Convection Metal of a pan heats by conduction… …heat travels through the atoms of the pan Not very important for stars! Conduction Radiation • • • Photons can “scatter” off of unbound electrons When they scatter, the photons share their energy with the electrons Ionized The electrons get hotter gas Convection and Radiation are most important for the Sun! Really high resolution spectrum of the Sun: lots of absorption lines! Hot source makes a continuous thermal spectrum Light passing through a cloud of cooler gas gets some light absorbed out: ABSORPTION SPECTRUM Outer layers of the Sun are cooler than interior Interior opaque part of Sun produces a thermal spectrum, while cooler outer layers produce absorption lines! How Much Fusion a Second? • Einstein’s formula – E = m c2 • The luminosity of the Sun is – 4 x 1026 Watts • So … The Sun loses 4 million tons of mass per second! The Sun Takes About 4 Weeks to Rotate •What is the sun made of? • We know diameter & mass • Density = mass / volume – Density = 1.4 times water! – Low density + – Hot temperature The Sun is a ball of gas! • Determined from study of spectrum and atomic spectra in the laboratory • 74% Hydrogen • 25% Helium • 1% All other elements Particles emitted by the sun detected on the Earth confirm picture of the Sun given in this power point. Good night. Very important thing is the question of mass That question can be translating into question: What are binary stars ???????? star Binary Stars A large ball of gas that creates and emits its own radiation. two balls – not necessarily gas, not necessarily emitting radiation Can be white dwarf, even black hole >60% of Stars are in Binary Systems Contains two (or sometimes more) stars which orbit around their common center of mass. Importance - only when a star is in a binary system that we have the possibility of deriving its true mass. The more unequal the masses are, the more it shifts toward the more massive star. The period – watching the system for many years. The distance between the two stars - if we know the distance to the system and their separation in the sky. → the masses can be derived. 2 3 4 d T G M1 M 2 2 The masses of many single stars can then be determined by extrapolations made from the observation of binaries. Visual binary: a system of stars that can be seen as two separate stars with a telescope and sometimes with the unaided eye Hubble image of the Sirius binary system. Sirius B can be clearly distinguished (lower left) They are sufficiently close to Earth and the stars are well enough separated. Sirius A, brightest star in the night sky and its companion first white dwarf star to be discovered Sirius B. Spectroscopic binary: A binary-star system which from Earth appears as a single star, but whose light spectrum (spectral lines) shows periodic splitting and shifting of spectral lines due to Doppler effect as two stars orbit one another. have patience Eclipsing binary: (Rare) binary-star system in which the two stars are too close to be seen separately but is aligned in such a way that from Earth we periodically observe changes in brightness as each star successively passes in front of the other, that is, eclipses the other Algol known colloquially as the Demon Star, is a bright star in the constellation Perseus. It is one of the best known eclipsing binaries, the first such star to be discovered. NASA An animation of an eclipsing binary system undergoing mass transfer. X-ray Binaries A special class of binary stars is the X-ray binaries, so-called because they emit X-rays. X-ray binaries are made up of a normal star and a collapsed star (a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole). These pairs of stars produce X-rays if the stars are close enough together that material is pulled off the normal star by the gravity of the dense, collapsed star. The X-rays come from the area around the collapsed star where the material that is falling toward it is heated to very high temperatures (over a million degrees!).