Constellations
Constellations
Constellations
I. Constellations
Group of stars
that appear to
form a pattern in
the sky.
88 recognized by
International
Astronomy Union
A. Zodiac
Band of 12 constellations
along the ecliptic.
B. Ecliptic
the plane of the Earths orbit
around the sun
The apparent path that the sun
(and planets) appear to move
along against the star
background.
Ecliptic
C. Circumpolar Constellations
Can be seen all year long
Never fully set below the horizon
Appear to move counter
clockwise around Polaris
Caused by Earths Rotation
Circumpolar Constellations
Star Trails
Examples of Circumpolar
Constellations
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
D. Ursa Major
Cassiopeia
In Fall: Straight overhead
Spring: Low over northern horizon
Summer Triangle
V. Kinds of Stars
A. Red Giant - large red
star at least 10x
diameter of the sun
Old Stars
Ex. Aldebaran
The sun will swell
into a Red Giant
when it is old
B. Super Giant
Largest of all stars 100x more
luminous
Explode as a Super Nova
Can form Black Holes
Ex. Betelgeuse, Rigel, Polaris
C. Dwarf Stars
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Less luminous
Very dense, mostly carbon
Tightly packed nuclei
Remains of a red giant that ran out of fuel
1 cup full of star =20 tons or 5 elephants.
Most are red/orange/yellow
White dwarf is the exception to the color
Sun is a yellow dwarf
A. Cepheid Variables/
Pulsating Stars
Change in brightness as they
expand & contract
Unequal balance between gravity &
nuclear fusion
Ex. Polaris, Betelgeuse
Nebula
Protostar
New/Stable State Star
Red Giant
Planetary Nebula
White Dwarf
Black Dwarf
Types of Nebulae
Diffuse Nebula - gases glow from
stars w/in them
Ex. Nebula
found in
Sagittarius
Types of Nebulae
Dark Nebula nebula not near a
bright star
Ex. Horse Head
Nebula in Orion
2. Protostar
Shrinking gas balls, caused by a swirl
of gas forming dense areas.
The gravity of the dense swirl in turn
attracts nearby gases so a ball forms.
Nuclear fusion occurs & Helium is
formed from Hydrogen
A new star is born in our galaxy every
18 days
4. Planetary Nebula
The outer layers of the Red Giant
puff out more and more.
The star loses gravitational hold on
its outer layers and they get
pushed away by the pressure
exerted from solar winds
Planetary Nebula
5. White Dwarf
Fuel is used up
No nuclear fusion
occurring
Remaining heat
radiates into space
1. Super Giant
Rare stars, largest of all
100x more luminous
Only stars with a lot of mass can
become super giants
Some are almost as large as our
entire solar system
Ex. Betelgeuse & Rigel
2. Super Nova
Explosion from a massive Super Giant
Outer layer blasts away at end of Life
Cycle
Emits light, heat, X-rays, & neutrinos
Leaves behind a neutron
star or black hole
4. Black Hole
Occurs when a star's
remaining mass is
greater than three
times the mass
of the Sun
Star contracts tremendously
Incredibly dense with a gravitational field
so strong that even light cannot escape.
X. Distance to stars
A. The Sun is closest star to Earth
B. Takes light 8 minutes to reach
Earth
C. Avg. distance:150,000,000Km = 1
AU distance from Earth to the Sun
D.Next nearest star is Proxima
Centauri 4.2 light years away; it
can only be seen in the southern
hemisphere
E. Light year
The distance light has traveled
in a year
9.5 x 1012 Km/yr
Speed of light 300,000 Km /sec
C. Star size
-Varies, large range
Smallest can be
smaller than Earth
Largest may be 600,000,000 x
Earth.
D. The Sun
is an average star
yellow in color
300,000 x the
mass of Earth
XII. Luminosity
Brightness of a star
Depends on size & temperature
Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
graphs Absolute Magnitude (or
Luminosity) vs. Temperature of
stars
Shows the life cycle of stars
Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
A. Absolute Magnitude
Measure of the amount of light it actually
gives off if all stars were placed a distance
of 32.6 light years away
Lower # means brighter star
Negative #s are the brightest
Ex. Sun = 4.75 Sirius = 1.4 Rigel = 7.0
Rigels the Brightest of the 3 listed if all were
lined up next to each other.
B. Apparent Magnitude
A measure of the amount of light received on
Earth
Stars below 0 are brightest
Each magnitude differs by 2.5
1st magnitude is 100 x brighter than 6th
magnitude
Ex. Sun = 26.8 Sirius = 1.45
Full Moon 12 .6 Rigel = .11
Sun is the brightest in our sky.
XIII. Galaxies
Systems containing millions or
billions of stars, gas, & dust held
together by gravity
Ex. Milky Way
There are great distances between
galaxies
The Milky Way belongs to a group
or cluster of galaxies called the
local group
XIV. Quasar
Quasi stellar radio source
Galaxies, very far away, with bright
centers
Thought to have a super massive black
hole at center
Most luminous objects known to man
XV. Electromagnetic
Spectrum
The arrangement of
electromagnetic radiation from
Radio waves to Gamma waves
Stars Emit:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Visible light
X-rays
Radio waves
Infrared waves
Ultraviolet waves
Ultra violet
Ultra violet
Visible
Visible
Infrared
Infrared
Radio
Radio
A. Electromagnetic waves:
Differ in wavelength & frequency
All electromagnetic waves travel at
the speed of light; 300,000 km/sec
Parts of a Wave
B. Spectroscope
Instrument that separates
light into its colors.
Contains:
Prism at one end
Slit at opposite end
which lines up with the
light source
C. 3 Types of Spectra
1. Continuous Spectrum
2. Brightline Spectrum
3. Darkline Spectrum
1. Continuous Spectrum
Produced by a glowing solid
Example a Tungsten white light
bulb, & white sunlight.
Visible Spectrum
red orange yellow
green
ROY G BIV
All the colors
of the rainbow
A continuous
spectrum
blue
indigo
violet
2. Dark-Line Spectrum /
Absorption Spectrum
Produced when a cooler gas lies
between the observer and an object
emitting a continuous spectrum
Example:
1. The atmosphere of planets
2.Outer layers of a star
3. Bright-Line Spectrum /
Emission Spectrum
Produced by a glowing gas which
radiates energy at specific wavelengths
characteristic of the element or
elements composing the gas
Example Neon signs, black lights, LEDs
Doppler Effect
http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~efortin/thesis/html/Doppler.shtml
Red Shift
If a star is moving away from
Earth there is a red shift, of its line
spectra; if the star is moving
toward the Earth there is a blue
shift of its line spectra
Red Shift
Red shift is evidence the universe is
expanding.