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presents
a                                production

    STELLAR DISTANCES
     based on the IB Astrophysics option


                                           1
STELLAR DISTANCES
How far away are stars and galaxies?
                 Parsec

             Stellar Parallax

          Spectroscopic parallax

            Cepheid variables

           Apparent magnitude

           Absolute magnitude
                                Image: Carina Nebula by ESO
Measuring distances
  By observation, we can measure how
  bright an object appears. In order to
   calculate the actual magnitudes or
luminosities of stars, we must know how
  far away they are. There are several
  ways of doing this depending on how
          great the distance is.
Astronomical units
              Reminders
1 Astronomical unit = 150 million km
(average Sun-Earth distance)

1 light year = 10 000 billion km
(distance light travels in 1 year)
Angle facts
360 degrees in a circle

60 arc-minutes in a
degree

60 arc-seconds in an
arcminute
 There are approx. 1.3
 million arc-seconds in
 a full circle
The parsec
 One parsec = 3.26 light years = 30 000 billion km

                                    “Parsec” is short for
The parsec (pc) – this is           parallax arc-second
the distance at which 1
AU subtends an angle of
     1 arc-second.

                       Nearest
                       star is
                       approx
                       1.3 pc
                       away
Stellar Parallax
         The method of measuring distance using the
         apparent change in position of nearby stars


Every six months, the
Earth is at the opposite
side of its orbit and nearby
stars shift position relative
to faraway stars. We can
measure the angle, p.

For very small angles,               p = angle in arcsec
tan p ≈ p (angles in                 R = base in AU
rads)                                d = distance in pc
Measurement of parallax
For parallax measurements
from the Earth, R is 1 AU, so




       Proxima Centauri subtends a parallax
       angle of 0.769 arc sec, so its distance is
       1/0.77 = 1.30 pc
The limit of parallax
 The farther away
an object gets, the
  smaller its shift.



                              A parallax angle of 0.005 arc-sec is
Eventually, the shift is      near the limit of measurability from
  too small to see.           the Earth, which corresponds to a
                              distance of 200 pc.

 Space telescopes are increasing the range of parallax, but
 there will always be limits due to the tiny angles involved.
Spectroscopic parallax
The method of measuring distance using the HR diagram.

Absorption spectrum of the star
This may tell us the type of star, eg main sequence, dwarf or giant

Wien’s law
Calculate the temperature from
the most intense wavelength

                                                   Finally, use L
H-R diagram                                       and b to find d
Identify the luminosity
of the star using the
temperature
The limit of spectroscopic parallax
       Beyond 10 mega-parsecs
        (30 million light years),
      stars are too distant to give
       enough light to determine
            the temperature.




                                      11
Cepheid variables
        The method of measuring distances using
        stars whose brightness changes predictably

                                    Their temperature and
                                  luminosity place them here
                                     on the HR diagram.




 A Cepheid variable is a
very bright, unstable star
 which pulsates brighter
      and dimmer.
                                                     12
Cepheid calculation
Cepheids in another galaxy can be used to measure its distance.




      The period of the Cepheid variable is related to its
      luminosity: the brighter it is, the slower it pulses.
      The graph of log L vs log T is linear.
  From observing the period, use the graph to find the
  luminosity (L). From L and apparent brightness (b), find
                                                         13
  the distance, d.
Different distances
  require different methods of measurement




                                         14
Apparent magnitude
                        Apparent magnitude
                        (m) assigns a number
                        to an object to describe
                        how bright it appears
                        from Earth

                             Faintest objects are
Betelgeuse and Rigel,        larger positive numbers
 stars in Orion with
apparent magnitudes
     0.3 and 0.9        Brightest objects are smaller
                        positive and even negative numbers
Magnitude scale
Each magnitude corresponds to a factor
of 2.5 change in brightness (a log scale)

Every 5 magnitudes is
    a factor of 100
 change in brightness

                5
 b   +1
          = 2.5 ≈ 100
 b   +6     1
 where b+m is brightness
 of star magnitude m
Absolute Magnitude (M)
    The magnitude an object would have if
     we put it 10 parsecs away from Earth
Apparent magnitude, m depends on the position of the
object. Absolute Magnitude, M puts them all on the
same scale.

                                          For the Sun,
                                            m = -26.7
                                            M = +4.8
Not forgetting that a bright star has a low magnitude number
Relation of M and m
  Knowing the apparent magnitude (m) and the
distance in pc (d) of a star, its absolute magnitude
      (M) can be found using the equation:




 What is the absolute magnitude of the Sun (m=-26.7)?
 The distance of Sun from Earth is 1 AU = 4.9x10-6 pc

 M = -26.7 – 5*log (4.9x10-7)= +4.8
a                                     production

              MUCH MORE AT
    http://nothingnerdy.wikispaces.com
http://nothingnerdy.wikispaces.com/E3+STELLAR+DISTANCES



                                               19

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IB Astrophysics - stellar distances - Flippingphysics by nothingnerdy

  • 1. presents a production STELLAR DISTANCES based on the IB Astrophysics option 1
  • 2. STELLAR DISTANCES How far away are stars and galaxies? Parsec Stellar Parallax Spectroscopic parallax Cepheid variables Apparent magnitude Absolute magnitude Image: Carina Nebula by ESO
  • 3. Measuring distances By observation, we can measure how bright an object appears. In order to calculate the actual magnitudes or luminosities of stars, we must know how far away they are. There are several ways of doing this depending on how great the distance is.
  • 4. Astronomical units Reminders 1 Astronomical unit = 150 million km (average Sun-Earth distance) 1 light year = 10 000 billion km (distance light travels in 1 year)
  • 5. Angle facts 360 degrees in a circle 60 arc-minutes in a degree 60 arc-seconds in an arcminute There are approx. 1.3 million arc-seconds in a full circle
  • 6. The parsec One parsec = 3.26 light years = 30 000 billion km “Parsec” is short for The parsec (pc) – this is parallax arc-second the distance at which 1 AU subtends an angle of 1 arc-second. Nearest star is approx 1.3 pc away
  • 7. Stellar Parallax The method of measuring distance using the apparent change in position of nearby stars Every six months, the Earth is at the opposite side of its orbit and nearby stars shift position relative to faraway stars. We can measure the angle, p. For very small angles, p = angle in arcsec tan p ≈ p (angles in R = base in AU rads) d = distance in pc
  • 8. Measurement of parallax For parallax measurements from the Earth, R is 1 AU, so Proxima Centauri subtends a parallax angle of 0.769 arc sec, so its distance is 1/0.77 = 1.30 pc
  • 9. The limit of parallax The farther away an object gets, the smaller its shift. A parallax angle of 0.005 arc-sec is Eventually, the shift is near the limit of measurability from too small to see. the Earth, which corresponds to a distance of 200 pc. Space telescopes are increasing the range of parallax, but there will always be limits due to the tiny angles involved.
  • 10. Spectroscopic parallax The method of measuring distance using the HR diagram. Absorption spectrum of the star This may tell us the type of star, eg main sequence, dwarf or giant Wien’s law Calculate the temperature from the most intense wavelength Finally, use L H-R diagram and b to find d Identify the luminosity of the star using the temperature
  • 11. The limit of spectroscopic parallax Beyond 10 mega-parsecs (30 million light years), stars are too distant to give enough light to determine the temperature. 11
  • 12. Cepheid variables The method of measuring distances using stars whose brightness changes predictably Their temperature and luminosity place them here on the HR diagram. A Cepheid variable is a very bright, unstable star which pulsates brighter and dimmer. 12
  • 13. Cepheid calculation Cepheids in another galaxy can be used to measure its distance. The period of the Cepheid variable is related to its luminosity: the brighter it is, the slower it pulses. The graph of log L vs log T is linear. From observing the period, use the graph to find the luminosity (L). From L and apparent brightness (b), find 13 the distance, d.
  • 14. Different distances require different methods of measurement 14
  • 15. Apparent magnitude Apparent magnitude (m) assigns a number to an object to describe how bright it appears from Earth Faintest objects are Betelgeuse and Rigel, larger positive numbers stars in Orion with apparent magnitudes 0.3 and 0.9 Brightest objects are smaller positive and even negative numbers
  • 16. Magnitude scale Each magnitude corresponds to a factor of 2.5 change in brightness (a log scale) Every 5 magnitudes is a factor of 100 change in brightness 5 b +1 = 2.5 ≈ 100 b +6 1 where b+m is brightness of star magnitude m
  • 17. Absolute Magnitude (M) The magnitude an object would have if we put it 10 parsecs away from Earth Apparent magnitude, m depends on the position of the object. Absolute Magnitude, M puts them all on the same scale. For the Sun, m = -26.7 M = +4.8 Not forgetting that a bright star has a low magnitude number
  • 18. Relation of M and m Knowing the apparent magnitude (m) and the distance in pc (d) of a star, its absolute magnitude (M) can be found using the equation: What is the absolute magnitude of the Sun (m=-26.7)? The distance of Sun from Earth is 1 AU = 4.9x10-6 pc M = -26.7 – 5*log (4.9x10-7)= +4.8
  • 19. a production MUCH MORE AT http://nothingnerdy.wikispaces.com http://nothingnerdy.wikispaces.com/E3+STELLAR+DISTANCES 19

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