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ASTR 1120: Stars & Galaxies Topics for Today • Why are spectral classes O, B, A … linked to star’s surface temperature ? • How do we measure brightness of stars: and why apparent vs absolute magnitudes? Cat’s Eye Planetary Nebula Prof. Juri Toomre TA: Licia Ray Lecture 15 Mon 16 Feb 04 • Mid-Term Exam 1 (graded) should be returned in class on Wed • Homework Set 3 still available: due in class this Friday (we have office hours -- we are happy to help with anything) zeus.colorado.edu/astr1120-toomre Brightness / Distance Clicker Q • B. Leonardo and Guinevere are two stars that have the same apparent brightness. Leonardo has a larger parallax angle than Guinevere. Which star is more luminous? • A. Leonardo • B. Guinevere • C. Cannot determine from data given Spectra help classify stars Brightness / Distance • Leonardo has a larger parallax angle -thus he is closer to us • They both have the same APPARENT brightness, but Leo is closer • B. Guinevere must be more luminous OBAFGKM • Spectral (color) classification O= bluest, hottest G = yellow (Sun) M = reddest, coolest 1 RECALL the refinements: DECIMAL SUBDIVISION LUMINOSITY CLASSES Sun is: G2 V COLOR CLASS Why temperature and spectral lines are linked? SAHA gives the answer: Cecelia figured out WHY stellar spectra are so different: TEMPERATURE • She showed that SURFACE TEMPERATURE is the big factor • She used the newly-devised SAHA EQUATION that could estimate how many electrons remain attached to atoms as temperature is changed (or the level of ionization) Cecelia Payne-Gaposchkin (Harvard PhD thesis 1925) O B A F G K M Æ decreasing temperature SAHA predicts (spectral) line-strengths with temperature can estimate “population of different energy levels” in H, He … and ionization Spectral Classification: O B A F G K M Stars and their spectral classification Hottest stars: O B ionized helium only Hot stars: A F helium, hydrogen Cooler stars: G hydrogen, heavier atoms Coolest stars: M molecules, (complex absorption bands) 2 Oh to describe a star ! Surface Temperature • Which is a red supergiant ? • • • • Magnitudes: Apparent vs Absolute • Giving measures to stellar luminosities • Built on choices made by Greeks! Measuring BRIGHTNESS B. A. B. C. D. Spectral type G2, luminosity class V Spectral type M2, luminosity class I Spectral type O9, luminosity class I Spectral type M1, luminosity class V Stellar MAGNITUDES Weird system: brighter is smaller magnitude, even negative! Of cultural importance, even if a bit confusing (secret society) (Slightly) screwy world of MAGNITUDES magnitudes m apparent mag: what looks like in sky M absolute mag: what would look like if at 10pc distance ( LUMINOSITY ) IF can estimate distance, then can determine M given m M = m if at distance 10pc 3 DISTANCE MODULUS Color Index: B-V measure of distance to the star magnitudes assigned using photometric FILTERS (quicker than taking spectra to classify stars) H-R Namesakes HertzsprungRussell (H-R) Diagram Luminosity (magnitude) vs Spectral class (temperature) Ejnar Hertzsprung Henry Norris Russell For the Next Lecture • Finish reading all of Chap 16, Properties of Stars, pretty carefully • We shall use binary stars to help determine stellar MASSES • We shall see how to determine stellar RADII, needed to make sense of the H-R diagram • Work on Homework Set 3, both on the H-R Diagram web tutorial, and in deciding which nearby stars are the winners for Part B. Luminosity Å Temperature 4