Chapter 30

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Chapter 30 Stars, Galaxies & Universe

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Chapter 30. Stars, Galaxies & Universe. Characteristics of Stars. What is a “Star”? A ball of gases that gives off a tremendous amount of electromagnetic energy (x-ray, radio, light, etc.) Are stars really “burning”? No, they are extremely hot due to billions of nuclear reactions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 30

Chapter 30

Chapter 30Stars, Galaxies & UniverseCharacteristics of StarsWhat is a Star? A ball of gases that gives off a tremendous amount of electromagnetic energy (x-ray, radio, light, etc.)

Are stars really burning?No, they are extremely hot due to billions of nuclear reactions.

What type of Nuclear reactions?Nuclear Fusion combining atomic nuclei to form heavier elements

Which two elements are most stars composed of?Hydrogen and Helium

Nuclear Fusion

Equilibrium in a star is the balance between pressure from nuclear reactions pushing out and gravity pulling in.Nuclear Fusion

The energy constantly being released by a star is like millions of atomic bombs going off at the same time ALL the time!

Luminosity & Magnitude = BrightnessApparent: how bright stars appear from EarthAbsolute: how bright a star really is.

Motion of StarsApparent (Earths rotation) vs. Absolute (expanding universe)

Motion of StarsRed-Shift: stars appear more red as they move away from us. (This is one piece of evidence that the universe is still expanding since the Big Bang)

Click Ambulance to hear Doppler sound-effectDoppler Effect: Light and Sound travel in waves like all forms of energy. Moving toward you, the waves are pushed together, but going away, they spread apart. This causes the pitch of sound and color of light appear to change.

Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram

This diagram compares the Temperature to Luminosity/Absolute Magnitude (or brightness) of stars. Our sun is about average temperature and brightness for stars. This also represents the life cycle of stars, growing from a nebula into Red Supergiants before collapsing into White Dwarfs (or neutron stars). The center band or cluster is referred to as the "Main Sequence". Life Cycle of a Star