Astronomy 142 Recitation #2

Similar documents
Astronomy 111 Recitation #2

Today in Astronomy 142: observations of stars

Astronomy 142 Recitation #7

ASTR-1020: Astronomy II Course Lecture Notes Section III

= 4,462K T eff (B) =

Structure & Evolution of Stars 1

Determining the Properties of the Stars

Today in Astronomy 328: binary stars

Lecture 12: Distances to stars. Astronomy 111

Lecture Outlines. Chapter 17. Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan Pearson Education, Inc.

Measuring the Properties of Stars (ch. 17) [Material in smaller font on this page will not be present on the exam]

Stellar Astrophysics: The Continuous Spectrum of Light

Astronomy 113. Dr. Joseph E. Pesce, Ph.D. Dr. Joseph E. Pesce, Ph.D.

Stars: basic observations

How to Understand Stars Chapter 17 How do stars differ? Is the Sun typical? Location in space. Gaia. How parallax relates to distance

Observed Properties of Stars - 2 ASTR 2110 Sarazin

Observed Properties of Stars - 2 ASTR 2120 Sarazin

CASE STUDY FOR USE WITH SECTION B

Hertzprung-Russel and colormagnitude. ASTR320 Wednesday January 31, 2018

The Earth and the Sky

The Magnitude Scale. The Color Index.

Chapter 10 Measuring the Stars

* * The Astronomical Context. Much of astronomy is about positions so we need coordinate systems to. describe them. 2.1 Angles and Positions

The magnitude system. ASTR320 Wednesday January 30, 2019

2. The Astronomical Context. Fig. 2-1

The Magnitude Scale Measuring the brightness of astronomical objects

HOMEWORK - Chapter 17 The Stars

Astronomy 421. Lecture 8: Binary stars

MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Physics Department Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Department. Problem Set 6

KEELE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL SCIENCES Year 1 ASTROPHYSICS LAB. WEEK 1. Introduction

Structure of Our Galaxy The Milkyway. More background Stars and Gas in our Galaxy

15.1 Properties of Stars

Lecture 16 The Measuring the Stars 3/26/2018

Light and Stars ASTR 2110 Sarazin

Lecture 2. The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram Blackbody Radiation and Stellar Mass Determination. Glatzmaier and Krumholz 2 Prialnik 1.

Parallax: Measuring the distance to Stars

Agenda. LAB (Inst. Dickinson): Lab Constellation/Star Quiz Angular Measurement Lab

Properties of Stars. 1.1 Brightnesses of Stars

Astronomy 1143 Quiz 1 Review

Lecture 2. The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram Blackbody Radiation and Stellar Mass Determination. Glatzmaier and Krumholz 2 Prialnik 1.

ASTR 200 : Lecture 13 Doppler Effect and binary motion

WHAT ARE THE CONSTELLATIONS

CHAPTER 2 A USER'S GUIDE TO THE SKY

Astronomy. The Nature of Stars

Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Announcements. Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Observing Highlights. Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Lecture Outline

5. A particular star has an angle of parallax of 0.2 arcsecond. What is the distance to this star? A) 50 pc B) 2 pc C) 5 pc D) 0.

Spectroscopy, the Doppler Shift and Masses of Binary Stars

Astronomy 1143 Final Exam Review Answers

HW 5 posted. Deadline: * Monday 3.00 PM * -- Tip from the coach: Do it earlier, as practice for mid term (it covers only parts included in exam).

Astronomy 150: Killer Skies. Lecture 20, March 7

Chapter 11 Surveying the Stars

Exam #1 Covers material from first day of class, all the way through Tides and Nature of Light Supporting reading chapters 1-5 Some questions are

Chapter 15 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Surveying the Stars Pearson Education, Inc.

Useful Formulas and Values

Basic Properties of the Stars

Now on to scales in the. Let s change scale by TWO orders of magnitude at a time and see what happens.

Ay 20 Basic Astronomy and the Galaxy Problem Set 2

Astronomy 102 Lab: Distance to the Pleiades

Measuring the Stars. The measurement of distances The family of distance-measurement techniques used by astronomers to chart the universe is called

Astronomy 142 Recitation #8

MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Physics Department Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Department. Problem Set 5

Scales of Size and Time

Astro 1050 Mon. Apr. 3, 2017

The Nature of Stars. The Nature of Stars

ClassAction: Stellar Properties Module Instructor s Manual

How big is the Universe and where are we in it?

The Flammarion engraving by an unknown artist, first documented in Camille Flammarion's 1888 book L'atmosphère: météorologie populaire.

Stars: Stars and their Properties

Stars I. Distance and Magnitude. How Does One Measure Distance? Distances. Stellar Parallax. Distance Equation some examples!

Constellations In ancient times, constellations only referred to the brightest stars that appeared to form groups, representing mythological figures.

ASTR 200 : Lecture 13 Doppler Effect and binary motion

AST 1002 Section 1 (Dobrosavljevic) PLANETS, STARS, GALAXIES

Today in Astronomy 111: the Sun and other blackbodies

Stellar Composition. How do we determine what a star is made of?

Guidepost. Chapter 2 A User s Guide to the Sky. Constellations Constellations (2) 8/27/2015. Outline. Outline (continued)

Get ready for quiz # 5! Get out a ½ sheet and Calculator

Properties of Stars. For such huge objects, stars have comparatively simple properties when seen from a long way off

Examination paper for FY2450 Astrophysics

Properties of Stars. N. Sharp (REU/NOAO/AURA/NSF)

Exam# 1 Review Gator 1 Keep the first page of the exam. Scores will be published using the exam number Chapter 0 Charting the Heavens

Intro to Astrophysics

Light. Geometric Optics. Parallax. PHY light - J. Hedberg

OBSERVING THE NIGHT SKY I

Observational Astronomy - Lecture 13 Evolution of the Universe and Final Review

PARALLAX AND PROPER MOTION

The light from the stars we see at night travel great distances to reach Earth. Other than the sun, Proxima Centauriis the next closest

Lecture 2: Motions of the Earth and Moon. Astronomy 111 Wednesday August 30, 2017

Observed Properties of Stars ASTR 2120 Sarazin

Chapter 8: The Family of Stars

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

r p L = = So Jupiter has the greater angular momentum.

Announcements. Lecture 11 Properties of Stars. App Bright = L / 4!d 2

MSci Astrophysics 210PHY412

PHYS-333: Problem set #1 Solutions

Astronomy 122 Outline

Characterizing Stars

Characterizing Stars. Guiding Questions. Parallax. Careful measurements of the parallaxes of stars reveal their distances

Midterm Study Guide Astronomy 122

Science : Introduction to Astronomy. Lecture 2 : Visual Astronomy -- Stars and Planets. Robert Fisher

Astro 242. The Physics of Galaxies and the Universe: Lecture Notes Wayne Hu

Transcription:

Astronomy 14 Recitation # 5 January 01 Formulas to remember The notes for this week s lectures are full of definitions and you should have the whole lot at your fingertips eventually. Here are some of them, that might be useful today. Trigonometric parallax r = 1AU/tan p 1AU/ p ( p in radians) 18 r p = 1 arcsec =.086 10 cm =.6 light-years 1 parsec r = ( 1 parsec) p[ arcsec] Magnitudes and color indices (here all the ms and Ms are magnitudes) Flux, distance and luminosity: f = L 4π r. Apparent magnitude and flux: m m =.5 log ( f f ) 1 1 This applies to any kind of magnitude, if the fluxes are measured in the same band as the corresponding magnitudes. Absolute magnitude (= apparent magnitude for an object 10 parsecs away): At any wavelength: Mλ = mλ 5log ( r 10 pc) Bolometric: M= m 5 log ( r 10 pc) = 4.75.5 log ( LL ) Distance modulus: DM = m M = 5log ( r 10 pc) (see problem 1c, below).5log Color index: CI ( λ1, λ) = mλ m M M.5 log f 1 λ = λ 1 λ = λ f λ1 B V = m m = M M = f ( V) f ( B) B V B V B V 0.9 + 9000 K T e (see FA, p. 17, and also Homework #1) Bolometric correction (get bolometric magnitude from V magnitude; see Figure 1): m = mv + BC M = MV + BC Note that magnitudes are dimensionless. BC 0 4 Common (base 10) and natural (base e) logarithms: 1 log x = ln x = log eln x = 0.44ln x ln 10 0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5.5 B V = mb mv Figure 1: bolometric correction 01 University of Rochester 1 All rights reserved

Astronomy 14, Spring 01 By "log" we mean common logarithm, and by "ln" natural logarithm. Planck blackbody function (power per unit area, bandwidth and solid angle): Bλ ( λ, T) hc 1 = 5 hc λkt λ e 1 ; peak at λ maxt = 0.9 cm K. Note that our main textbook (FA) calls the Planck function Iλ ( λ, ) symbols; the rest of the Universe uses B T. This is an eccentric choice of λ λ, T and so shall we. The flux from a blackbody, emitted within a small bandwidth λ ( λ) and a small solid angle Ω ( 4 π ): Solid angle (, ) f = Bλ λ T λ Ω. dω= sinθdθdφ Ω= sinθdθdφ Ω π θ for a cone with small angular radius θ. Binary stars and their motions (here all the ms and Ms are masses; a is an orbital semimajor axis length; a = r for circular orbits) Doppler effect: λ observed λ rest λ rest = v r c m Center of mass, circular orbits: 1 r = m r1 Kepler s third law, any eccentricity: Kepler s third law, circular orbits: Conservation of momentum: 4π P = a + a G m ( 1 ) + m 1 4π P = r + r G m ( 1 ) + m 1 m1 a vr v = = = m a1 v1r v1 (see HW#1) P f m1, m = v1r < m πg Mass function (see HW#1): 01 University of Rochester All rights reserved

Astronomy 14, Spring 01 Workshop problems Warning! The workshop problems you will do in groups in Recitation are a crucial part of the process of building up your command of the concepts important in AST 14 and subsequent courses. Do not, therefore, do your work on scratch paper and discard it. Better for each of you to keep your own account of each problem, in some sort of bound notebook. 1. Magnitudes and distances a. The bright star Vega (α Lyrae; brightest star in the northern celestial hemisphere) has apparent magnitude 0.0 at all the usual visible wavelengths (U,B,V). What would its apparent magnitude at these wavelengths be, if Vega were moved a factor of five further away? b. Vega s parallax is 0.19 arcsec. What is its absolute V magnitude? c. The Pleiades are a cluster of relatively young stars in the constellation Taurus. (The stars in a cluster that occupies a very small patch of sky, like the Pleiades, can all be assumed to lie approximately the same distance away from us.) Measurements of their apparent V magnitudes and B-V color indices appear in Figure. Given your results for Vega, how far away are the Pleiades? V 0 5 10 d. What are the absolute V magnitudes of the bluest (smallest B-V) and reddest (largest B-V) stars in the Pleiades e. What are the absolute bolometric magnitudes of the bluest and reddest stars in the Pleiades? (You will need to use the chart of bolometric correction given in Figure 1 and Tuesday s lecture notes.) 15 0 0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 B-V Figure : apparent V magnitude as a function of color index B-V for the Pleiades (Stauffer et al. 1994).. Suppose all binary stars consisted of two stars with radius R orbiting each other with constant separation 1 AU, like the example shown in lecture on Tuesday. a. From the viewpoint of one of these systems: what is the solid angle which, if observers lay within it, they could see the system eclipse? (Hint: recall the trig identity cos a± b = cos acos b sin asin b.) b. What is the solid angle of the whole sky? c. What, therefore, is the fraction of binary stars in which we could detect eclipses? Compare this result to that noted in the two largest unbiased surveys that could detect binaries, those by the Kepler and Hipparcos satellites: 1.% and 0.8% respectively (Prsa et al. 010).. Binary stars a. Armed with nothing but Newton s second law, prove Kepler s third law for bodies in circular orbit about a much-more-massive object with mass M. 01 University of Rochester All rights reserved

Astronomy 14, Spring 01 b. Armed with nothing but Newton s second law, derive the form of Kepler s third law for two objects with equal mass m in circular orbits about their common center of mass. Learn your way around the sky, lesson. (An exclusive feature of AST 14 recitations.) You may find the lab s celestial globes, and TheSky running on the lab computers, useful in answering these questions about the celestial sphere and the constellations. 4. a. A good illustration of how first- and second-magnitude stars look is the constellation Ursa Major. How many first-magnitude ( V = m V <, 1) and second-magnitude ( V = m V <, ) are there in Ursa Major? b. Using the first-magnitude stars in Ursa Major, tell me how to find the stars Polaris (α Ursae Minoris 1, the bright star closest to the north celestial pole) and Arcturus (α Boötis). c. How far from the north celestial pole is Polaris? Give your answer in degrees, and also in units of the angular diameter of the Moon. g. Calculate the angles (in degrees) between α and β UMa, and α and η UMa, using angulardistance equation you derived last week 1 Per tradition, we use the Latin names of the constellations. Unfortunately the tradition has also come down to us to treat the names as Latin nouns and to give them their proper declension. Thus they appear in accusative form above (e.g. Ursa Major), except when used as a Greek stellar name, in which case the genitive form is used (e.g. α Ursae Majoris = the brightest star of Ursa Major ). 01 University of Rochester 4 All rights reserved

Astronomy 14, Spring 01 Solutions 1. a. Flux decreases with the square of distance from the star: f L =. 4π r We re talking about the same L at two different distances; let s call the near one r and the further one r1 = 5r. Then, f r 1 r1 m1 = m +.5 log = m +.5 log = m + 5 log f1 r r = 0 + 5log 5 =.5. b. Vega s distance, from its parallax, is r = 1 parsec 0.19 arcsec = 7.75 parsecs, so M = m 5 log r 10 pc = 0 5 log 7.75 10 = 0.55 V V c. We may assume that the Pleiades with B V = 0 are just like Vega but lie at a different distance. Reading the V magnitudes of these stars off of Figure, we get V = m V 6.6. Calling the Pleiades 1 and Vega, f r1 m1 m =.5log = 5log f1 r ( m1 m) 5 ( 6.6 0) 5 r = r 10 = 7.75 parsecs 10 = 160 parsecs. 1 In other words, the distance modulus of the Pleiades is DM = mv M V = 6.6 0.55 6.0. All the Pleiades appear fainter than their absolute magnitudes by about 6 magnitudes. (This distance is close to the best measurements, but not quite on the nose. The Hipparcos team measured the trig parallaxes of many Pleiades and got a distance of 15 parsecs, once they got their systematic errors under control.) d. The bluest Pleiades have V.7 and the reddest have V 15.5. Since their distance modulus is about 6.0 magnitudes, their absolute V magnitudes are M V =. and 9.5, respectively. e. The bluest Pleiades have B V 0.1 and the reddest have B V 1.5. From Figure 1 we get BC = 0.86 and -1.79 respectively, so the bolometric magnitudes are M = MV + BC 4. and 7.7, respectively.. a. In class we showed that there would be a grazing eclipse if the orbital plane were inclined with respect to the line of sight by R AU. Clearly there would also be a grazing eclipse for a tilt of R AU. So, in terms of the inclination angle with respect to an observer s line of sight, i, an eclipse corresponds to the range i = π ± R AU. Thus observers who see the system eclipse will occupy the solid angle 01 University of Rochester 5 All rights reserved

Astronomy 14, Spring 01 π π + R AU π + R Ω= sin idi dφ = π[ cos i] π R 0 π R AU = π cos( π R AU) cos( π + R AU) Now use that identity, note that cos( π ) = 0 and approximation whenever appropriate: AU AU ( R ) ( R ) π ( R ) Ω= π sin AU sin AU = 4 sin AU 8π R AU = 0.1 steradians. b. Shown in class on Tuesday: Ω= 4 π steradians for the whole sky. sin π = 1, and use the small angle c. The fraction of observers considered uniformly and randomly distributed over the sky -- who can see the eclipse is the same as the ratio of these two solid angles: 8π R F = = 0.009 = 0.9% 4πAU. This, of course is the same fraction of eclipses that would be seen by one observer among a randomly-oriented collection of binary stars. The result is quite similar to what Kepler and Hipparcos actually got.. All you need is F = ma. a. For example, GMm mv 4π mr F = = ma = = mω r = r r P 4π P = r, q.e.d. GM b. Each will orbit the center of mass, which is halfway between them: ( r) Gm v 4π F = = ma = m = mr r P 4π 4π 4π P = r r = r = r1 + r, q.e.d.. Gm G m G m1 m +. The three constellations that concern us this week are usually abbreviated in the Greek names of stars, as UMa, UMi and Boo. a. Three of each. Together with one third-magnitude star (δ UMa), and a fourth-magnitude one right next to ζ UMa, they are better known as the Big Dipper. Note that the Greek names for the stars do not really indicate the rank-order of brightness. 01 University of Rochester 6 All rights reserved

Astronomy 14, Spring 01 b. Follow the line through the two stars furthest from the Dipper s handle (β and α UMa) to Polaris. Follow the curve of the Dipper s handle (δ through η UMa) to find the bright, orange star Arcturus. c. The angular diameter of the Moon (and the Sun) is about half a degree. The declination of Polaris, in J000 coordinates, is + 89 15'50.794" = 89.64, so it lies 0.76, or about 1.5 moon diameters, from the Pole. g. I get 5.74 and 5.709. (Note that this is the same answer that TheSky gives: look near the bottom of the Object Information window.) 01 University of Rochester 7 All rights reserved