Lecture 2 6 Astronomical Parameters

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Astronomical

Parameters
Lecture 2: Distance, Radii, Temperature, Mass
I. DISTANCE
Farthest known Galaxy: MACS0647: 13.3 billion light years.

Closest: Andromeda (M31): 2 million light years.


Cosmic Distance Ladder
Cosmic Distance Ladder
1. Radar Range (within Solar System)
The radar transmits a short radio pulse with very high pulse
power that propagates in this given direction with the
speed of light.
If in this direction is an obstacle, for example an airplane,
then a part of the energy of the pulse is
scattered in all directions. A very small portion is also
reflected and the radar evaluates the contained
information.
Cosmic Distance Ladder
2. Parallax (Nearby Stars)

d = 1/p (d is in parsecs and p in arcseconds)


Cosmic Distance Ladder
Parallax (Nearby Stars)

d = 1/p (d is in parsecs and p in arcseconds)

An arcsecond (denoted by the symbol “) is an anglular


measurement equal to 1/3600 of a degree or 1/60 of an
arcminute. There are also 206,264.5” in a radian, so that 1”
= 4.848 ×10-6 radians.

Limitations: Parallax angles of less than 0.01 arcsec are very


difficult to measure from Earth because of the effects of the
Earth's atmosphere. This limits Earth based telescopes to
measuring the distances to stars about 1/0.01 or
100 parsecs away.
Cosmic Distance Ladder
Parallax ( Nearby Stars )

d = 1/p (d is in parsecs and p in arcseconds)

1 AU = average distance between Sun and


Earth = 1.496 × 108km
Cosmic Distance Ladder
Parallax (Nearby Stars)

d = 1/p (d is in parsecs and p in arcseconds)


More accurately, the IAU has defined the AU as:

“equal to the distance from the centre of the Sun at which


a particle of negligible mass, in an unperturbed circular
orbit, would have an orbital period of 365.2568983 days.”

Direct Method: Most Accurate


The first stellar parallax (of the star 61 Cygni) was measured
by Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (1784-1846) in 1838. Bessel is
also known for the Bessel functions in mathematical
physics.
Distance (Parallax)
Q1. Sirius, a binary star in our galaxy, is a distance of 2.64 parsecs
away from us. What would the parallax angle in arcseconds be
for this binary star?

1/2.64 = 0.38 arcseconds

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?

Star A (1.22 pc) is closest to Earth. It is 1 parsec closer than


Star B (2.22 pc).
Cosmic Distance Ladder
3. Main-Sequence Fitting
Einar Hertzsprung and Henry Norris Russell plotted stars on
a chart of luminosity and temperature. Most stars fall on a
single track, known as the Main Sequence now known as the
H-R diagram.

When looking at a cluster of stars, the apparent magnitudes


and colors of the stars form a track that is parallel to the
Main Sequence, and by correctly choosing the distance, the
apparent magnitudes convert to absolute magnitudes that
fall on the standard Main Sequence.
APPARENT MAGNITUDE (m): Astronomers use the term
apparent magnitude to describe how bright an object appears
in the sky from Earth. The idea of a magnitude scale dates back
to Hipparchus (around 150 BC) who invented a scale to
describe the brightness of the stars he could see. He assigned
an apparent magnitude of 1 to the brightest stars in the sky,
and he gave the dimmest stars he could see an apparent
magnitude of 6. He did not include the sun, moon, or planets
in his system.

The response of the eye to increasing brightness is nearly


logarithmic. We, therefore, need to define a logarithmic scale
for magnitudes in which a difference of 5 magnitudes is equal
to a factor of 100 in brightness.
1. Which of the two objects is brighter? By how much?

Jupiter is approx. 2.83 times brighter than Sirius A.


The apparent magnitude and brightness of a star do
not give us any idea of the total energy emitted per
second by the star.

Luminosity and Radiant Flux

The luminosity of a body is defined as the total


energy radiated by it per unit time. (in erg s−1)

Radiant flux at a given point is the total amount of


energy flowing through per unit time per unit area of
a surface oriented normal to the direction of
propagation of radiation. (erg s−1 cm−2)
The radiant flux of a source depends on two factors:
(i) the radiant energy emitted by it, and
(ii) the distance of the source from the point of observation.
The energy from a source received at any place, determines
the brightness of the source. This implies that F is related
to the brightness b of the source: the brighter the
source, the larger would be the radiant flux at a place.

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

b) If a star at 40 pc is brought closer to 10 pc, i.e., 4


times closer, how bright will it appear in terms of the
magnitude?
16 times

c) A star at a distance of 20 pc is having m = -20. What


will be its absolute magnitude?
M = -21.50
The ratio of radiant flux of two stars at the
same distance from the point of observation
is equal to the ratio of their luminosities.

The amount of luminosity


passing through each sphere
is the same.

Area of sphere: 4 (radius)2

Divide luminosity by area to


get brightness
Cosmic Distance Ladder
4. Cepheid variables
The important feature of a Cepheid Variable that allows it to
be used for distance measurements is that its period is
related directly to its luminosity . This relation allows
us to work out how much brighter than the Sun the star is.
From there we can calculate how much further away the
star must be than the Sun to make it the brightness we see
from Earth.

Consider a Cepheid with a period of 11 days and an


apparent magnitude m = 2.3.
This corresponds to a magnitude difference of 10.
MSUN = 4.8  Mstar = -5.2
Given m = 2.3, M = -5.2, calculate distance r.

316 pc

Most luminous stars: 106 LSun


Least luminous stars: 10–4LSun
Cosmic Distance Ladder
5. Supernovae (Exploding Stars)
The good and bad aspects of supernovae as distance
indicators
Good
Very luminous, so can be seen at very large distances.
Astronomers have found supernovae well beyond z=1, with
the most distant event at z=3.9! That means that
supernovae can reach MUCH farther into space than any
other method we have discussed.
Bad
Unpredictable: We cannot predict where and when a
supernova will explode, so we cannot arrange in advance to
observe them with a telescope. Most supernovae grow
brighter for 2-3 weeks after the explosion, remain bright for
1-3 months, then fade to invisible within a year or two.
The last supernova to explode in the Milky Way, and be noticed
by humans, happened in 1604: Kepler's Star.

Two other supernovae probably occurred in the Milky Way


more recently (around 1680 and 1870), but were not noticed
due to intervening dust and gas.

The star "S Andromeda" was a type Ia explosion in the


Andromeda Galaxy, but it happened just a few decades before
astronomers were ready with equipment powerful enough to
study it properly.

Thirty years ago, in 1987, a supernova appeared in the Large


Magellanic Cloud. It was close enough that
neutrinos from the explosion were detected on Earth, but no
event since then has even come close.
Astronomers use "standard candles", that is, the
objects whose absolute magnitude is thought to be
very well known. Then, by comparing the relative
intensity of light observed from the object with that
expected based on its assumed absolute magnitude,
the inverse square law for light intensity can be used
to infer the distance.

Supernovae Type I (which do occur regularly) is one


such standard candle.
Cosmic Distance Ladder
6. Hubbles Law
The Hubble Law states that the distance to a given
galaxy is proportional to the recessional velocity as
measured by the Doppler red shift the z-parameter,
which is the fractional shift in the spectral
wavelength. The Hubble distance is given by

The value of H0 = 72 km/s/Mpc, yields an age for the


Universe of ~ 13.7 Gyr.
2. Stellar Radii (Direct)
Except for the Sun, all the stars in the sky are very far away, and
their angular sizes are very small. Although the theoretical
resolving power of modern large telescopes (such as the Keck
telescope with 10-meter aperture) is about 0.01 arc-seconds.
Atmospheric effects are also important.

The angular size of Betelgeuse was first observed using


interferometry in 1921  0.051 arc-seconds.

R Doradus is the star with the largest observed angular size:


0.057 arc-seconds.

Size of star = angular size [radian]  distance


If we know the luminosity (from apparent brightness and
distance measurements) and the temperature of the stars, then
we can calculate their physical size:

Assuming that stars are blackbody


• The energy output of a unit surface area on the surface of
the star is determined by its temperature (Stefan-Boltzman
Law)
• The total energy output (luminosity) therefore depends on
the temperature and its total surface area, which is related to
its size.

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

Thus the radius of Sirius A is 100 times that of


Sirius B.
3. Stellar Temperature
Stars are black body radiators.

- A black body is a theoretical object that absorbs 100% of


the radiation that hits it. Therefore it reflects no radiation
and appears perfectly black.
- Roughly we can say that the stars radiate like blackbody
radiators.
- At a particular temperature the black body would emit the
maximum amount of energy possible for that temperature.
- Blackbody radiation does not depend on the type of object
emitting it. Entire spectrum of blackbody radiation depends
on only one parameter, the temperature, T.
• Visible light falls in the 400 to 700
nm range

• Stars, galaxies and other objects


emit light in all wavelengths
Eg Balmer series (n=2 to n>2)

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

(Sun’s surface is 5800 K.)


Level of ionization
also reveals a star’s
temperature.
Blackbody Experiment Results
The total power of the emitted radiation
increases with temperature.
 Stefan’s law : P = s A e T4
 = 5.67 x 10-8 W/m2K4
 The emissivity, e, of a black body is 1, exactly.
The peak of the wavelength distribution shifts to
shorter wavelengths as the temperature
increases.
 Wien’s displacement law
 lmaxT = 2.898 x 10-3 m . K
4. Stellar Mass
Stars comes in binaries.
BINARY SYSTEMS OF STARS
• Mass is the most important property. Mass decides rest all
other properties.
• Two stars revolving around each other forms a binary
system of stars. Majority of the stars are in Binaries, which
help us to determine their masses. There has been
observation of three and four companion too.
1. VISUAL BINARIES
• Individual stars can be resolved. They are bright and are
relatively well separated (1-100 AU).
• These are gravitationally bound but they do not interact, like
accretion etc.
• The brightest component has suffix ‘A’, the next ‘B’ and so on.
Eg., Sirius A & Sirius B.
Determining component masses of eclipsing
binaries using velocity curves
1. Determine semi-major axis using observed
velocity (V), period (P)
2a1 2a2
v1  v2 
P P
a  a1  a2

2. Determine sum of masses using


Kepler’s 3rd law 3
a
M1  M 2  2
P
3. Determine mass ratio using a1, a2
M 1a1  M 2 a2 or M 1v1  M 2 v2 a1 a2
4. Use sum, ratio to determine component masses a = a 1 + a2
2. SPECTROSCOPIC BINARIES
• If binaries are not visual and well separated, they can still
be identified by the Doppler shift of the spectral lines
they emit.
• If the stars are of different spectral types, their spectrum
will be different.
• The absorption in the composite spectrum will be seen
to move in wavelength.
• At smaller eccentricities, the orbital speed is essentially
constant =
Doppler shift
• Radial Velocity of the object can be known.
Δλ = λrest x Vradial/c = λnew - λrest
λnew > λrest: The object is moving away: red shifted
λnew < λrest: The object is moving towards us: blue shifted

This observation of spectral shift is important in


determining the fact that the far of galaxies are moving
away faster: THE UNIVERSE IS EXPANDING AND
ACCELERATING
• Inclination angle affects observed radial velocities

• For circular orbits with I=90 velocity curves are


sinusoidal. Inclination will reduce amplitude
• Eccentricity will change velocity curve to be
non-sinusoidal. Can estimate eccentricity
from deviation from sinusoidal shape
Almost Circular Orbits
SINGLE LINE SPECTROSCOPIC BINARIES
3. ECLIPSING BINARIES
WHEN ONE OF THE STARS ECLIPSES THE OTHER (PARTIALLY OR FULLY)

RADIUS OF THE SMALL STAR


Visual Binary – Sirius
Sirius (in constellation Canis Major) is
the brightest star in the night-time sky
(magnitude -1.4). It is a visual binary
system. Sirius A (the larger of the two) Hubble Space
Telescope image of
is a main sequence star with spectral Sirius
type A0, and Sirius B is a white dwarf.

Sirius A & B time sequence


Algol – Eclipsing Binary
Algol (the demon star) is in the
constellation of Perseus.
• Algol A: main sequence star,
more massive.
• Algol B: subgiant, less
massive.

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