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Distribution of Matter in Space

This article explores the characteristics and life cycle of stars, including their sizes, densities, temperatures, and brightness. It also discusses the birth, life, and death of stars, as well as the formation and types of galaxies. Additionally, it covers constellations, asterisms, and star clusters in the night sky.

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Distribution of Matter in Space

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  1. Distribution of Matter in Space

  2. What is a Star? • H-R animation • Star Spectra (Gizmo) • Much of the visible matter in space makes up stars -- hot, glowing spheres of hydrogen gas that give off tremendous light energy. • The billions and billions of stars vary in: • Size • Density • Temperature (colour depends on surface temp; very hot = blue; cooler = red) • Brightness (luminosity)

  3. What is the life cycle of star? http://www.google.ca/imgres?q=star+life+cycle&hl=en&biw=1152&bih=683&tbm=isch&tbnid=iV0L5uG5BJhmmM:&imgrefurl=http://www.seasky.org/celestial-objects/stars.html&docid=O-VRp6eOvD9w8M&imgurl=http://www.seasky.org/celestial-objects/assets/images/starlife.jpg&w=560&h=287&ei=jsBlUa_zFMGFiALn6IGwDQ&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=464&vpy=60&dur=1650&hovh=161&hovw=314&tx=213&ty=100&page=1&tbnh=134&tbnw=261&start=0&ndsp=20&ved=1t:429,r:2,s:0,i:99

  4. The Birth of a Star • Just like organisms live, grow and die, so do stars. • Gravity pulls gas and dust in a NEBULA together into a rotating sphere (composed of ~75% H and 23% He) • As more material is drawn into the spinning ball, the mass at its core increases causing the temperature to rise and possibly start to glow (called a pro-star) • As the process continues, heating in the core can reach 10 000 000oC and causes the fusion of hydrogen into helium. • As a star is ‘BORN’, huge amounts of radiation are given off! • A star will emit radiation for millions or billions of years!

  5. Life and Death of Stars • Depending on the mass of a star it can be either a: Sun-like star or Massive star • They will spend most of their lives (millions to billions of years) in a stable state converting hydrogen to helium • But just like fuel in a car runs out, so will the hydrogen • So what happens when the hydrogen is used up????

  6. When the fuel runs out? • When the hydrogen runs out, the stable star shrinks heating the helium core so it starts fusing to carbon, then to other elements. • As gravity causes the star to contract, further nuclear reactions occur, leading to the expansion of the outer layers • Sun-like star  RED GIANT • Our sun will do this in 5 billion years • It’s diameter will extend past the orbit of Mars • Massive star  RED SUPERGIANT

  7. Red Giant vs. Red Supergiant • Red Giant • Red Supergiant

  8. The Final Stage of a Star’s Life For a Sun-like star: • Fusion ends when the temp. is not hot enough to keep the reaction going • With no heat, the pressure decreases and gravity causes the star to slowly collapse on itself  WHITE DWARF • Eventually it will fade into a cold, dark, BLACK DWARF (it takes so long none have formed in the universe yet) For a Massive star: • Fusion ends when the fuel runs out • With no heat input, gravity wins and the star collapses quickly and sends out a shock wave • This causes the outer part of the star to explode in a SUPERNOVA • If the star is not destroyed it will become a NEUTRON STAR or BLACK HOLE

  9. After a supernova…. • NEUTRON STAR • Is a rapidly spinning object only about 30km in diameter • BLACK HOLE • Highly dense remnant of a star in which gravity is so strong that not even light from the radiation going on inside the remnant can escape • Scientists only know about them because of hoe material near them become very hot and bright

  10. What can colour and temperature tell us about the life cycle of star?

  11. Hertzsprung-Russel Diagram • These two scientists began comparing the surface temp. of stars with its brightness. • The noticed a pattern (pg. 385 Fig: 1.18): • 90% of all stars fit into their main sequence; • Our sun fits in the middle of the sequence • White dwarfs and super giants are the exception • This pattern accounts for our current theory that stars evolve and change over long periods of time

  12. What are Galaxies? http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap020901.html

  13. Galaxies • A galaxy is a grouping of millions or billions of stars, gas and dust, held together by gravity • Elliptical: a disk or football shaped galaxy made up of mostly old stars • Spiral: Milky Way style galaxies with long curved arms leading away from a bright central core • Irregular: Small galaxy that lacks a definite shape

  14. How do organize the night sky? • Constellations – groupings of stars we see as patterns in the night sky • There are 88 recognized by the International Astronomical Union (i.e. Ursa Major) • Asterisms – unofficially recognized star groupings • Big Dipper – see pg. 390 Fig. 1.23

  15. Star Groups • Star clusters like Pleiades – SEVEN sisters is an asterism with an ancient myth! • Cassiopeia was a queen of Ethiopia known for her beauty. She was more beautiful than the Sea nymphs she believed. This enraged Poseidon. To punish Cassiopeia he sent Cetus the whale to destroy the coast of the Queen’s homeland! • The Nymphs sought eternal punishment, arranging for her to be placed in the heavens tied to a chair!

  16. Our reference point for measuring the position of two objects in space is usually the Earth. Altitude and Azimuth are calculated from the observers position. Altitude is from 0° at the horizon to 90° straight up. ZENITH refers to the highest point directly overhead Azimuth determines the direction (0°= north, 90°= east, 180°= south, 270°= west) Describing the Position of Objects in Space

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