HW - Ch 19
If a star is 10 parsecs away, how long ago did the light we see from it tonight begins its journey toward us?
32.6 years
Which of the following stars is a Cepheid variable?
Polaris
What is the closest star to the Sun?
Proxima Centauri
Why did it take astronomers until 1838 to measure the parallax of the stars?
because the stars are so far away that their annual shift of position in the sky is too small to see without a good telescope
If an astronomer wants to find the distance to a star that is not variable and is located too far away for parallax measurements, she can:
find the star's luminosity class from its spectrum and read the luminosity from an H-R diagram
Which type of star has the least amount of pressure in its atmosphere?
supergiants
A type of star that has turned out to be extremely useful for measuring distances is
the Cepheid variables
The higher the luminosity (intrinsic brightness) a Cepheid variable is,
the longer the period of its variations
The apparent brightness of stars in general tells us nothing about their distances; we cannot assume that the dimmer stars are farther away. In order for the apparent brightness of a star to be a good indicator of its distance, all the stars would have to be:
the same luminosity
A light curve for a star measures how its brightness changes with
time
The luminosity class of a star tells an astronomer
whether the star is a supergiant, a giant, or a main-sequence star
The period-luminosity relationship for Cepheid variables was discovered by
Henrietta Leavitt
Astronomers must often know the distance to a star before they can fully understand its characteristics. Which of the following properties of a star typically requires a knowledge of distance before it can be determined?
its luminosity
Kepler's Laws can give us the relative distance of objects in the solar system. To convert these relative distances into actual distances, we need to:
measure the distance directly to any object orbiting the Sun
To get the distance to a Cepheid variable star, astronomers must take several steps. Which of the following is not one of these steps?
measure the star's Doppler shift from its spectrum
An astronomer is observing a single star (and one which does not vary) which she knows is located about 30 light-years away. What was the most likely method she or her colleagues used to obtain that distance?
measuring the star's parallax
The original definition of a meter was
one ten-millionth of the distance from the Earth's equator to its pole
The instrument astronomers are now using to make the most precise measurements of stellar parallax we have ever had is
the Gaia satellite in space
The measurement of cosmic distances was helped tremendously by the discovery, in the early part of the 20th century, that in Cepheid variable stars, the average luminosity was related to:
the length of time they took to vary
What is the baseline that astronomers use to measure the parallax (the distance) of the nearest stars?
½ the diameter of the Earth's orbit around the Sun