Lecture 2 6 Astronomical Parameters
Lecture 2 6 Astronomical Parameters
Lecture 2 6 Astronomical Parameters
Parameters
Lecture 2: Distance, Radii, Temperature, Mass
I. DISTANCE
Farthest known Galaxy: MACS0647: 13.3 billion light years.
Q2. Star A has a parallax angle of 0.82 arcseconds, and Star B has a
parallax angle of 0.45 arcseconds. Which star is closest to Earth,
and by how much?
Flux ~ 1/d2.
Absolute Magnitude
The absolute magnitude (M) of an astronomical object is
defined as its apparent magnitude if it were at a distance of 10
pc from us.
Absolute Magnitude (M) & Apparent Magnitude (m)
a) The distance modulus (m-M) of a star is −1.0. At
what distance is it from us?
6.31 pc
316 pc
luminosity
r 4
4π σ T
Q: The surface temperatures of Sirius A and Sirius B
are found to be equal. The absolute magnitude of
Sirius B is larger than that of Sirius A by 10. How does
their radii compare?
R2 = 0.01 × R1
n λ, air
(nm)
E = hν = hc/λ
3 656.3
4 486.1
5 434.0
6 410.2
7 397.0
∞ 364.6
Hottest stars:
50,000 K
Coolest stars:
3000 K