Classification of Stars
Classification of Stars
Classification of Stars
Chapter 11
Topics :
1. Colors, Temperature and Spectra of Stars.
Spectral decomposition:
longer wavelength
lower frequency
A prism spectrograph
2. Locate the position of the maximum and you can calculate the temperature:
max
T surface 0.29 cm K
Hotter stars are blue and red stars are relatively cool on the surface !
3. or you can compare the spectra to computer models of spectra of stars with
different temperature and develop an accurate color-temperature relation.
Color , spectra and temperature of stars -5
Star classification:
Stellar temperature is by far the most important property which determine the
structure of the observed spectrum. Detailed calculations can be compared with
observed spectra to assign surface temperature to stars.
Stars are classified this way and assigned letters:
1 AU
Distance to the star d is: d
p
1 deg
For example if p 0.5 sec of arc and noting that 1 sec of arc =
3600
1 6
and 1 deg = radians 0.5 arc sec 2.42 10 radians
57.3
1.46 10 11 m 13
d 6
6 10 m
2.42 10
or in light years (1 ly = 9 10 15 m) it is 6.75 ly
Astrometry -2
The Hipparcos satellite instrument launched in 1989 has measured
some 118,000 stars out to about 300 ly !
Our galaxy has a much larger size than 300 ly ! Some 100,000 lyrs.
2. Find the closest match in spectral type amongst nearby stars which have been
triangulated and their distance known.
3. Assume that the nearby and distant objects are the same sort of star, specifically
they have the same luminosity.
4. Now compare the apparent brightness and luminosity and apply the inverse
square law and you have the distance.
Now we have a set of stars for which we know:
To compare these stars and look for some order, we calculate the
absolute magnitude or brightness at a standard distance and
plot the absolute magnitude versus surface temperature. We get
the Herzsprung Russell diagram.
To do this we find out the brightness of all these stars if they had all
been placed at some fixed distance. We can do this in two different ways:
Their results are shown for a sample of stars – obtained by both methods:
Note luminosity
increases much more
rapidly than increasing
mass !
Radii of Stars:
With modern techniques of interferometry – use of multiple telescopes
to look at the same object in different wavelength regions – we can now
determine stellar radii of stars. If we know their color temperature
we can calculate their absolute luminosities with respect to that of the sun.
This is because luminosity is related to the power emitted per square meter
multiplied by the area of the star. And the power emitted per square meter
is proportional to the surface temperature raised to the 4th power !!
2 4
L 4 R T
where is a universal constant - Stefan Boltzmann constant
Star Clusters are regions in our galaxy where many stars must have formed
at about the same time – in a special star forming region.
1. Open Clusters are found in the Galactic Disk; typical cluster will have
any number of stars from a few dozen to hundreds. Generally young stars
and are not tightly bound.
On the other hand open clusters are young and should contain stars
which are massive.
Note the
blue color
for hot
massive
stars.
HR tracks for stars in various clusters.
Section 11.6
Two stars when they rotate about each other, their motion can be seen by
1. Actual motion of two stars relative to each other. They have to be
rather far apart to be able to see this.
If the mass of one of the stars is known the other can be estimated by using
Newtonian version of Kepler's III law or at least a lower limit can be placed
on the mass of the other star. This is how Black Holes have been identified.
Final Remark:
stellar mass
Stellar lifetime Lifetime
stellar luminosity