Science 6 Chapter 10 Stars Part 1
Characteristics of a Star
1) Brightness 2) colors of stars 3) size and distance of stars
Kinds of Stars
1) Variable star a) pulsating variable star b) eclipsing variable star 2) Nova 3) Supernova 4) Neutron star A) pulsar 5) Black Hole
Size of stars from smallest to largest
1) dwarf stars 2) giant stars 3) supergiants
Brightness
1) magnitude -- brightness of a star 2) apparent magnitude -- apparent brightness (how it looks to us) 3) absolute magnitude -- true brightness of a star
Sun has a diameter of
1,400,000 km
The sun is one of billions of stars in the sky The star nearest earth (the sun) is about _______ away, it is so near to us scientists can study it
150,000,000 km or 93,000,000 miles
Pulsar
A neutron star that spins rapidly on its axis - if a neutron stars core continues to collapse, it starts to spin rapidly and fling pulses of energy into space - this is how pulsars got their name and how astronomers find them - they trace the pulses of energy back to the star emitting (doing) them
Black hole
Astronomers believe that when a massive supergiant star runs out of fuel, it's gravitational force is so great that the core cannot stop collapsing - it essentially disappears from space.
Neutron star
Astronomers believe when some supergiants collapse the pressure in the core crushes the protons and electrons together to form neutrons - the core is made up of mostly neutrons - so a neutron star began as a supergiant hundreds of millions of kilometers may become as small as a few kilometers in diameter - the neutrons are very tightly packed in the neutron star
Proxima Centauri is the closest star to Earth
False/Sun is the closest star to Earth
The apparent movement or change in position of one star in relationship to other stars is know as pulsating
False/parallax
Stars are glowing balls of gases that reflect light
False/produce
The gravitational force of a black hole is so great that is pulls everything into it even
Light.
On February 19,1992, astronomers were excited to observe
Nova Cygni 1992. -- the brightest nova in recent history and could be seen with a telescope
Supernovas occur less than
Once a century in our galaxy - the last supernova in our galaxy occurred in 1604 some that occur in other galaxies can be seen from Earth with telescopes
Astronomers cannot see a black hole but they have seen the effects of the gravitational pull on other matter.
Sometimes when two stars are near each other gases from one star appear to spiral into a black hole - the light from the gases seem to just disappear
The relationship between a star's surface temperature and its color
Stars appear white but they are many colors. They are closely related to their surface temperature. The coolest stars are a dull red, and the hottest stars are blue --- Surface temp is hotter -- they are blue or brighter Cooler --- they are red or dimmer
The ___ is the closest star
Sun
Supernovas sometimes can be seen during
The day - after brightening the star fades and collapses - this explosion usually results in the complete destruction of the star and the remnants often become a neutron star or black hole
Supernova
The death explosion of a star.
Why are black holes not visible?
The gravitational force is so great that it pulls everything into it - even light
Astronomers believe that a supernova occurs when a massive star has used up its hydrogen fuel.
The star starts to collapse but the great pressure created by the stars gravity causes the star to to heat up quickly and explode. It increases in size and brightness and can become brighter than a galaxy
A light year is the distance that light travels in one year
True
A supergiant star that collapses and disappears from space is called a black hole
True
Variable stars regularly or repeatedly change in magnitude
True
Super giant star that would span all the way to Jupiter's orbit it if were place where the sun is
VV Cephei
What do we call stars that regularly or repeatedly change in brightness?
Variable stars
What usually causes a nova?
When an existing star suddenly flare up and becomes hundreds or thousands of times brighter than normal - because one stars gravity pulls gases from the other star
Hipparchus
a Greek who lived 130 years before the time of Christ, he devised the system still used today to classify stars by their brightness. He classified stars he could see as +1 on his scale. He classified the faintest stars as +6. Now telescopes can see much farther into space. Astronomers have adjusted Hipparchus scale. They have added negative numbers to represent objects that are even brighter than many stars. With huge telescopes they can see stars as faint as magnitude of +29 or greater.
Nebula
a cloud of interstellar gases and debris -- can be seen either because they glow from light within or because they block light from behind them and look like dark clouds
magnitude that indicates how bright a star really is
absolute
true brightness of a star
absolute magnitude
magnitude that indicates how bright a star appears to us
apparent
Describe the difference between apparent and absolute magnitude
apparent -- how bright a star appears to us (by looking in the sky) absolute --- the measurement of the true brightness of a star (special measurements are used to find this)
how bright a star appears to us
apparent magnitude
supergiants
are hundreds of times larger than the sun and thousands of times brighter
giant stars
are tens to hundreds of times larger and hundreds of times more luminous than the sun
light year
astronomers solve the problem of measuring in enormous numbers by using other units of measurement (light-year) --- the distance that light travels in one year
Astronomers can determine how far away from Earth some stars are by measuring how far stars appear to move compared to even more distant stars. To determine the distance a star appears to move,
astronomers take pictures of the star at 6 month intervals. These pictures enable them to view the star from opposite points in Earth's orbit around the sun.
apparent magnitude
astronomers use a set of numbers to represent apparent magnitude. Lower numbers represent brighter stars
The scientific study of the stars is called _____
astronomy
A ____ was once a supergiant star that collapsed and disappeared from space
black hole
Hottest Stars
blue
What color is the star with the hottest surface temperature?
blue
color of the hottest stars
blue
A ____ is a group of stars that form a picture in space
constellations
A light-year is the _____ that light travels in one year
distance
eclipsing variable stars
does not change its absolute magnitude but does change its apparent magnitude. -- pairs of stars that orbit each other because of their gravitational pulls on one another. -- the apparent brightness of the stars is greater when both stars can be seen. -- when one star eclipses, or moves between the earth and the other star, the reduction in light cause the apparent brightness to dim
Coolest Stars
dull red
kind of star that our sun is
dwarf
A star that is close to Earth will appear to move more than a star that is
far away. Scientists examine the photographs, noting a star's change in position in relationship to more distant stars.
Nova (means "new" in Latin)
forms when an existing star suddenly flares up and becomes hundreds or thousands of times brighter than normal. Even with a telescope people only spot about two to three novas in our galaxy each year.
day of Creation on which God created the sun, moon, and stars
fourth
kind of star that is hundreds of times brighter than the sun
giant
The sun is a
glowing ball of gases made up of about 70% hydrogen 28% helium 2% other elements
pulsating variable star
go through periods of swelling and brightening, then shrinking and dimming. The absolute magnitude of the star changes during this cycle. --- some change in regular patterns others seem to have no pattern at all
The inside of a star is so hot that hydrogen atoms fuse together to form
helium atoms --- as this fusion occurs, the star releases energy in the form of heat and light
the neutrons are very tightly packed in the neutron star
just one teaspoon of the stars core might weigh one billion tons
Name one unit of measurement scientists use for distances
light-year
how far light travels in one year
light-year
The _____ of a star depends on the star's size, temperature and distance from Earth.
magnitude
the brightness of stars
magnitude
absolute magnitude
measures how bright a star really is, not just how bright it appears to be. Astronomers determine absolute magnitude by imagining that all stars are the same distance from Earth. How bright a star would appear at that distance is the star's absolute magnitude. Special measurements and mathematics help astronomers calculate the absolute magnitude of a star
The sun is a
medium-sized yellow star
A cloud of dust, gases, and debris in space is called a
nebula
a cloud of dust, gases, and debris
nebula
may occur when a supergiant collapses to a very dense core
neutron star
A star that suddenly flares and becomes brighter is called a
nova
an existing star flares and becomes brighter
nova
Planets and moons only reflect light -- the sun and other stars produce their own light by
nuclear fusion
neutron star that spins rapidly on its axis
pulsar
The difference between pulsating variable stars and eclipsing variable stars
pulsating variable stars --- stars that go through periods of swelling and brightening, then shrinking and dimming -- the absolute magnitude of the star changes during this cycle and some change in regular patterns and some have no pattern at all. eclipsing variable stars -- does not change its absolute magnitude but does change its apparent magnitude. pairs of stars that orbit each other because of their gravitational pulls on one another. The apparent brightness of the stars is greater when both stars can be seen.
color of the coolest stars
red
dwarf stars
small and medium sized stars
When a star goes "nova" it
spews dust and gases into space. Its outer layers gradually float off into space, usually leaving a smaller, dimmer star behind
Size and Distance of stars
stars come in many sizes
Variable stars
stars that regularly or repeatedly change in magnitude
star closest to the earth
sun
kind of star that is hundreds of times larger than the sun and thousands of times brighter
supergiant
the death explosion of a star
supernova
parallax
the apparent movement or change in position of one star in relationship to other stars
magnitude
the brightness of a star depends on the stars Size, temperature, and distance from Earth
Proxima Centauri
the next closest star to Earth --- 270,000 times farther away from Earth than the sun --- 4.2 light years away
In AD 1054 Chinese astronomers saw a supernova
the remnants formed Crab Nebula The closet nebula to earth caused by a supernova
Colors of stars
when you first look at a star they appear white -- stars are actually many colors. a star's color is closely related to its surface temperature.