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Chapter 30 section 1 characteristics of stars pages 775-780

Chapter 30 section 1 characteristics of stars pages 775-780. By: Kaylah Thomas. Characteristics of stars. A star is a ball of gases that give off a tremendous amount of electromagnetic energy. Stars in the night sky appear to be tiny specks of white light.

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Chapter 30 section 1 characteristics of stars pages 775-780

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  1. Chapter 30 section 1 characteristics of stars pages 775-780 By: Kaylah Thomas

  2. Characteristics of stars • A star is a ball of gases that give off a tremendous amount of electromagnetic energy. • Stars in the night sky appear to be tiny specks of white light. • If you look closely at the stars in the sky, they are vary in color.

  3. Examples of stars • Antares- shines with a slightly reddish color. • Rigel- shines blue-white • Arcturus- shines with a orange tint • A famous star is sol it is a yellow star which you see every night.

  4. Analyzing starlight • Astronomers direct starlight through spectrographs which are devices that separate light into different colors or wavelengths. • Spectrum- starlight passing through a spectrograph produces a display of colors and lines called spectrum. • There are three type of spectra; emission, or bright line, absorption or dark line: and continuous.

  5. Continue analyzing starlight • All stars have dark line spectra bands of color crossed by dark lines where the color is diminished. • Stars are made up of different elements in forms of gases. • The inner layers of stars are very hot • The outer layers are somewhat cooler • Elements in the outer layers absorb some of the light radiating from within the star. Because different elements absorb different wavelengths of light.

  6. The compositions of stars • Every chemical element has a characteristic spectrum in a given range of temperatures. • The colors and lines in the spectrum of a star indicate the elements that make up the star. • The most common element in stars is hydrogen • The most second common element is helium • Elements such as carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen, usually in small quantities, make up most of the remaining mass of stars.

  7. The temperatures of the stars • The surface temperature of a star is indicated by the star's color. • The temperature of most stars range from 2,800c to 24,000c,but some are hotter. • Mostly a star that shines with blue light has about the average surface temperature of 35,000c.

  8. The sizes and masses of stars • Stars also vary in size and mass • A medium- sized star has a diameter of about 1,390,000km. • Some giant stars have a diameters that are 1,000 times the suns diameter. • Many stars also have about the same mass as the sun, through some stars may be significantly more or less massive.

  9. Distances to stars • A light year- is the distance that light travels in one year. • Parallax- an apparent shift in the position of the object when viewed from different locations. • The stars and earth are measured in light years.

  10. Stellar brightness • Apparent magnitude- the brightness of a star seen from the earth • Absolute magnitude- the brightness that a star would have at a distance of 32.6 light-years from earth.

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