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Final Exam Review Astronomy 111 Review • Remember: don’t memorize facts, understand concepts p • The final is comprehensive, but will stress the material we covered in the last few weeks of class more ASTR111 Lecture 7 Earth and Moon • Cause of seasons • Understand the relative orientation of the Earth, Moon, Sun • Understand what causes solar and lunar eclipses • Know K what h t causes tides tid ASTR111 Lecture 7 History • Define: retrograde, epicycle • Geocentric vs vs. Heliocentric • Understand the layout of the Solar System and be able to make predictions based on observations ASTR111 Lecture 7 Kepler and Galileo • Define: ellipse, semimajor axis, period, eccentricity, y, aphelion, p , perihelion p • Know the implications of Kepler’s Laws • Know the implications of Galileo’s Galileo s observations ASTR111 Lecture 7 Newton • Define: velocity, acceleration, force, orbital speed, p , escape p velocity, y, angular g momentum • Know what Newton’s Newton s laws tell us • Be able to use the Newton’s equations to solve problems ASTR111 Lecture 7 Light • Define: light-year, spectrum • Energy of a photon • Know the relative wavelengths of light in the spectrum • What causes an emission or absorption li iin a spectrum? line t ? • What do spectral lines tell us? ASTR111 Lecture 7 Light • Define: blackbody, temperature • Understand Kirchoff’s laws • How does temperature of a star relate to color? • Be able to use – Wien’s law – Stefan-Boltzmann law – Inverse-square law of brightness • Use Doppler effect to calculate speeds ASTR111 Lecture 7 Telescopes • Whay are larger telescopes better? • Why do some telescope need to fly in space? – Atmospheric effects (absorption and blurring) • What are telescopes in remote locations? • What is the ultimate limit of the angular resolution l ti off a telescope? t l ? ASTR111 Lecture 7 Solar System Formation • Solar System formed from rotating cloud of gas & dust • Conservation of angular momentum caused flattening into disk • Planetesimals condensed and collided to form planets • Happened about 4.5 billion years ago • Hotter closer to yyoung g Sun,, cooler farther out in disk • Materials like rock and iron/nickel condensed in inner solar system • Icy materials in outer solar system • Our Solar System is not unique • Thousands of other planets now known around stars ASTR111 Lecture 7 Terrestrial Planets • M Mercury, Venus, V E th & M Earth, Mars are similar i il in composition • Small and rocky/iron • Have varying atmospheres and geological activity • Only Earth has a significant Moon • The Moon! • Probably formed from an early collision ASTR111 Lecture 7 Jovian Planets and other stuff • Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are all much more massive than Earth • Primarily composed of H and He • Most of the rest is water, methane, ammonia, and carbon dioxide (based) • Some small rocky/iron material in core • Consequence of formation location • Jupiter and Saturn are still “collapsing” and releasing heat • All have moons • Some are large, most are captured asteroids • Pluto is an example of a “dwarf planet” • There are many more! ASTR111 Lecture 7 Jovian Planets and other stuff • Asteroids are mainly found between Mars and Jupiter • Remnants of a planet that did not form • Mostlyy rockyy and iron/nickel • Comets are also remnants • Icy leftovers in the outer solar system • Some S rocky k material i l as wellll • Spectacular displays are icy material “boiling” off as they get close to Sun • If either a large asteroid or comets hits Earth it would be a disaster! • Possibly P ibl what h t kill killed d off ff th the di dinosaurs ASTR111 Lecture 7 Distances to Stars • Distance is important but hard to measure for objects outside the solar system • Trigonometric parallaxes – direct geometric method – only good for the nearest stars (~500pc) • Units of distance in Astronomy: – Parsec (Parallax second) – Light Year ASTR111 Lecture 7 Luminosity and Brightness • Luminosity of a star: – total energy gy output p – independent of distance • Apparent brightness of a star: – depends on the distance by the inversesquare law of brightness. – measured quantity from photometry. ASTR111 Lecture 7 Stellar Masses and Radii • Types of binary stars – Visual – Spectroscopic – Eclipsing • Only way to measure stellar masses: – Only roughly a few hundred stars • Radii are measured for f few f stars. ASTR111 Lecture 7 Stellar Colors and Spectra • Color of a star depends on its Temperature – Red Stars are Cooler – Blue Stars are Hotter • Spectral Classification – Classify stars by their spectral lines – Spectral differences mostly due to Temperature • S Spectral t l Sequence S (T (Temperature t Sequence) • O B A F G K M L T ASTR111 Lecture 7 HR Diagram and ML Relation • The Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram – Plot of Luminosity y vs. Temperature p for stars. • Features: – Main Sequence q ((most stars)) – Giant & Supergiant Branches – White Dwarfs • Luminosity Classification Mass-Luminosity Luminosity Relationship • Mass ASTR111 Lecture 7 Physics of Stars • Observational Clues to Stellar Structure: –H H-R R Diagram – Mass-Luminosity Relationship – The Main Sequence is a sequence of Mass ASTR111 Lecture 7 Physics of Stars • Stars shine because they are hot. – need an energy source to stay hot. • Kelvin-Helmholtz Mechanism – Energy gy from slow Gravitational Contraction – Cannot work to power the present-day Sun • Nuclear Fusion Energy gy – Energy from Fusion of 4 1H into 1 4He – Dominant p process in the p present-dayy Sun ASTR111 Lecture 7 Stellar Interiors • Energy generation in stars: – Nuclear Fusion in the core. – Controlled by a Hydrostatic “thermostat”. • Energy is transported to the surface by: – Radiation & Convection in normal stars – Conduction in white dwarf stars • With Hydrostatic Equilibrium, these determine the detailed structure of a star. ASTR111 Lecture 7 Stellar Interiors • Stars are held together by their selfg gravity y • Hydrostatic Equilibrium – Balance between Gravity & Pressure • Core-Envelope Structure of Stars – Hot, H t dense, d compactt core – cooler, low-density, extended envelope ASTR111 Lecture 7 Main Sequence • Main Sequence stars burn H into He in their cores. • The Main Sequence is a Mass Sequence. – Lower M-S: p-p chain, radiative cores & convective envelopes – Upper M-S: CNO cycle, convective cores & radiative envelopes • Larger Mass = Shorter Lifetime ASTR111 Lecture 7 ASTR111 Lecture 7 Post-Main Sequence Evolution •Stage: •Energy Source: •Main Sequence •Red Giant •Horizontal Branch •Asymptotic y p Giant •White Dwarf •H Burning Core •H Burning Shell •He Core + H Shell •He Shell + H Shell •None! ASTR111 Lecture 7 Post-Main Sequence Evolution • End of the Life of a Massive Star: – Burn H through Si in successive cores – Finally build a massive Iron core • Iron core collapse & core bounce • Supernova explosion: – Explosive E l i envelope l ejection j ti – Main sources of heavy elements ASTR111 Lecture 7 ASTR111 Lecture 7 Compact Stellar Remnants • White Dwarf: – Remnant of a star <8 Msun – Held up by Electron Degeneracy Pressure – Maximum Mass ~1.4 Msun • Neutron Star: – Remnant of a star < 18 Msun – Held up by Neutron Degeneracy Pressure – Pulsar = rapidly spinning neutron star ASTR111 Lecture 7 Black Holes • Black Holes are totally collapsed objects – gravity so strong not even light can escape – predicted by General Relativity • Schwarzschild Radius & Event Horizon • “Unobservable” objects are observable through their effect on surroundings – X-ray binarys – Jets – Orbital mechanics • Black Hole Evaporation – Emit "Hawking Radiation" ASTR111 Lecture 7 Clusters of Stars • H-R Diagrams of Star Clusters • Ages from the Main Main-Sequence Sequence Turn-off Turn off • Open Clusters – Young clusters of few 1000 stars – Blue Main-Sequence stars & few giants • Globular Clusters – Old clusters of a few 100,000 stars – No blue Main-Sequence Main Sequence stars & many giants ASTR111 Lecture 7 Galaxies • Three basic types of galaxies: – Spirals • Disk and spheroid component • Rotation of disk allows measurement of galaxy mass – Ellipticals – Irregulars • Differ in terms of – Relative R l ti gas content t t – Star formation History – Internal motions • Galaxies tend to group into Clusters – Groups, clusters, and superclusters – Galaxies can collide and merge • Some galaxies have “active” nuclei – Powered P db by llarge bl black kh holes l iin th the center t ASTR111 Lecture 7 Cosmology • Cosmological Principle: – The Universe is Homogeneous and Isotropic on Large Scales. – No special p p places or directions. • General Relativity predicts an expanding universe. universe • Cosmological Constant ASTR111 Lecture 7 The Big Bang • Big Bang model of the Universe – Starts in a hot, dense state – Universe expands and cools • Expansion and redshift • Critical density – Geometry G t off the th Universe U i • Hubble time = maximum age of the Universe ASTR111 Lecture 7 The Big Bang • Fundamental tests of the Big Bang • Primordial nucleosynthesis – Primordial Deuterium & Helium – Primordial light elements (Li (Li, B B, Be) • Cosmic background radiation – Relic R li blackbody bl kb d radiation di ti ffrom Bi Big B Bang – Temperature: T = 2.726 K ASTR111 Lecture 7 Fate of the Universe • The Fate of the Universe depends on the density y of matter. • Closed Universe: – Enough matter to stop the expansion – Collapses in a “Big Crunch” • Open Universe: – Expands forever – Ends in a cold, cold disordered state state. ASTR111 Lecture 7 Fate of the Universe • The Universe is composed of mainly Dark Matter and Dark Energy gy • We live in a flat Universe that will expand forever ASTR111 Lecture 7