Stellar Classification Flashcards

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1
Q

What is apparent magnitude (m)?

A

A measure of how bright a star appears in the sky

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2
Q

What is absolute magnitude (M)?

A

The apparent magnitude a star would have if it was 10 parsecs away

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3
Q

What is the Hipparcos scale?

A

Scale of apparent magnitude of 1 → 6

  • 6 → naked eye limit
  • Each step = x2.51
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4
Q

How does a 4th magnitude star compare to a 7th magnitude star?

A

3 magnitudes difference

So apparent magnitude (m) = 2.513 = 15.8 x brighter

(4th magnitude is brighter)

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5
Q

How could star B be bigger than star A?

A

Star B could be much further away

So appear dimmer from Earth

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6
Q

What does apparent magnitude correspond to?

A

The intensity of the star from the surface of the Earth

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7
Q

What does absolute magnitude correspond to?

A

The power output of the star

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8
Q

Define the lightyear

A

The distance light travels in a year

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9
Q

Define the parsec

A

Distance to star with parallax angle of 1”

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10
Q

A distant star has a parallax angle of 3”

Calculate how far away it is?

A

Make a right angled triangle

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11
Q

What information does m-M provide? (magnitude difference)

A

The smaller m-M → the closer the object

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12
Q

If m-M < 0

A

If m-M < 0 → star less than 10pc

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13
Q

If m-M = 0

A

If m-M = 0 → star at 10pc

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14
Q

If m-M > 0

A

If m-M > 0 → star further than 10pc

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15
Q

What’s wrong with this calculation?

A

d must be in parsecs!!!

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16
Q

Which star appears brighter?

A

Betelgeuse → has a smaller apparent magnitude (m)

17
Q

Which star has a greater power output?

A

Betelgeuse → has a smaller absolute magnitude (M)

18
Q

Which star is closer?

A

Bellatrix → m-M is smaller

19
Q

What is the Inverse Square Law?

A
20
Q

What does the Hertzsprung-Russel Diagram show?

A

Luminosity (or Absolute Magnitude) of star
vs
Surface Temperature (or Spectral class)

21
Q

What are the 3 main regions of the Hertzsprung-Russel Diagram?

A
22
Q

As the Sun runs out of Hyrdogen in the core how does it progress along the Hertzsprung-Russel Diagram?

A
  1. Becomes a Red Giant
  2. Becomes a White Dwarf (after Plaetary Nebula)
23
Q

How can Red Giants be incredibly luminous but have a Low surface temperature?

A

They have a massive Surface Area
(Stefan’s Law)

24
Q

How can White Dwarfs be not very luminous but have a very high surface temperature?

A

They have a tiny Surface Area
(Stefan’s Law)

25
Q

What is a perfect Blackbody?

A

An object that absorbs and re-emits all incident radiation (eg radiators, filament bulbs and stars)

26
Q

How is the** Blackbody Spectrum** different for a star with a greater surface temperature?

A
  1. Peak moves up and to left (shorter wavelength)
  2. Greater Intensity across all Wavelengths
  3. Shorter starting wavelength (x-intercept)
27
Q

What are the 7 Stellar Spectral Classes (in Temperature order)?

A
28
Q

What are the surface temperature ranges for the 7 Stellar Spectral Classes?

A
29
Q

How does a star produce an absorption spectra?

A

Colder outer layers of star absorb some wavelengths of radiation produced in the core

30
Q

Why is the Balmer Series most visible in the Absorption Spectra of A type stars?

A

Surface temperature hot enough for hydrogen electrons to be in n=2 state

But not too hot that electrons excite to higher states or for hydrogen to be ionised

31
Q

Describe the strength of the Balmer Series Absorption Lines for each of the Spectral Classes

A
32
Q

What is the lifecycle of a regular Star?
(<1.4xMsun)

A
33
Q

What is the lifecycle of a bigger Star?
(>1.4xMsun)

A
34
Q

When and how does a Red Giant form?

A
  1. At end of main sequence hydrogen in core runs out
  2. Gravitational pressure > Radiation Pressure
  3. Core shrinks heating up (GPE -> Thermal)
  4. Outer layers expand
  5. Core gets hot enough for He to fuse