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The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram: in The Life Cycles of The Stars

The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram plots the luminosity and surface temperature of stars. It shows that stars fall into distinct groups that represent different stages of stellar evolution. Main sequence stars, including our Sun, fuse hydrogen to helium in their cores. Above are giant stars and below are white dwarfs, which are dying stars. The diagram was discovered by Ejnar Hertzsprung and Henry Russell and provides insight into the life cycles of stars.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
158 views16 pages

The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram: in The Life Cycles of The Stars

The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram plots the luminosity and surface temperature of stars. It shows that stars fall into distinct groups that represent different stages of stellar evolution. Main sequence stars, including our Sun, fuse hydrogen to helium in their cores. Above are giant stars and below are white dwarfs, which are dying stars. The diagram was discovered by Ejnar Hertzsprung and Henry Russell and provides insight into the life cycles of stars.

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sidharth kashyap
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The Hertzsprung-Russell

Diagram
The H-R diagram plots the
luminosity (brightness) or
absolute magnitude of
stars against their surface
temperatures.
Most stars fall into distinct
groups in the H-R
diagram, because the
groups represent stages
in the life cycles of the
stars.
Apparent Magnitude

The apparent magnitude of a star is a measure of how bright


a star appears to be to an observer on Earth.
The lower the apparent magnitude number, the brighter the
star is. Some of the brightest stars in the sky are classified
as first-magnitude stars. The faintest stars that can be seen
with our unaided eye are called sixth-magnitude stars.
Some stars are so bright that they have a negative apparent
magnitude.
Luminosity and Absolute
Magnitude
Absolute magnitude is a measure of how bright a star would be
if all stars were at the same distance (ten parsecs) from Earth.
Thus, distance from Earth no longer becomes a factor in how
bright a star is. Remember, very bright stars that are very far
from Earth may appear to be very faint to us.
For example: Since our sun is so close to Earth, it has an
apparent magnitude of –26.7. However, the sun has an
absolute magnitude of only +4.8.
Remember, the mass and the temperature of the star are
important!
Apparent magnitude
Absolute magnitude
is how bright a star
is how much light is
appears to be from
actually given off by
earth due to how
a star.
close or far away it
is.
Mass, Size, and Temperature
of Stars
Stars vary greatly in their masses, size, and densities.

We cannot observe a star’s mass directly. We can only


calculate it based on other observations. The larger the mass,
the stronger the gravitational effect on the bodies around it.

Stellar masses are expressed as multiples of the mass of our


sun, which is called one solar mass.
Temperature and Color of Stars

Stars also vary in temperature. The range of colors a star


emits depends on its surface temperature. Analyzing the
light emitted by a star helps us to determine the stars
temperature.
Cooler surface temperatures (below 3900° C) results in a red
coloring (for example, Betelgeuse). Hotter temperatures
change the color to orange, then yellow (our sun, at about
5500° C), and then white. The hottest stars (such as Sirius)
have a bluish white color (above 9500° C).
Two astronomers discovered a relationship between
the absolute magnitude (real brightness) of a star
and its surface temperature. They plotted the
data on a graph.

Ejnar Hertzsprung Henry Russell


Denmark USA
The Hertzsprung-Russell
Diagram
About 90% of all stars seem to
fit in a band that runs from the
upper left of the diagram to the
lower right. This band is called
the main sequence. The stars
in this band are called main-
sequence stars.
Main-sequence stars vary in
surface temperature and
absolute magnitudes. However,
all main-sequence stars are
actively fusing hydrogen into
helium.
The Hertzsprung-Russell
Diagram
Above the main-sequence stars
are giant stars. Giant stars are
more luminous and have
diameters from 10-100 times
greater than our sun.
Super giants are giant stars
that have diameters more than
100 times greater than our sun.
These giant stars (but relatively
cool) are very luminous.
The Hertzsprung-Russell
Diagram
Also included on the H-R
diagram are white dwarfs.
These are stars that are near
the end of their lives. These
were once red giant stars that
have lost their outer
atmosphere and are now only
a glowing stellar core.

Red giant that loses outer


atmosphere = white dwarf
How Stars Form

• Collapsing gas and dust


clouds. This picture is
called the “Pillars of
Creation” because new
stars are being born in
different parts of the
nebula as the gas clouds
collapse and begin 7000 Light Years away.
spinning. Tallest Pillar is 4 Light Years High.
Flattening of the Solar Nebula
• As the nebula collapses, the wind created causes
clumps of gas collide & merge.
• Swirling winds cause the nebula to assume the shape
of a disk.
Protostar – a developing star. Not yet a star.
No nuclear fusion happening yet.

The temperature continues to increase as the gas cloud compresses and spins
faster and faster.

Once the temperature reaches 10 Million Degrees Kelvin (18 Million Degrees
Fahrenheit) then nuclear fusion begins and the star is born.
Lower Mass

Higher Mass

This diagram follows the life of both large and average


stars. The life path of a star is dependent on the
MASS of the star. Low mass stars take the top path.
High mass stars take the bottom path.
Life cycle of our sun

We are now here.


Our sun is a small to average star. No
supernova in the future. It will end as a white
dwarf that eventually fades away.

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