01-ChapterRadiation
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Transcript 01-ChapterRadiation
Chapter 2
Read Pages 7-17
Continuous Radiation
from Stars
2.1 Brightness of Starlight
What two major factors determine how
bright a star appears to us?
Answers:
power output
distance from us
What quantities are used to describe
how bright a star is?
m = Apparent Magnitude
M = Absolute Magnitude
L = Luminosity
f = Energy Flux
Ptolemy - 150 AD
Ptolemy divided the
stars visible to the naked
eye into six classes of
brightness call
magnitudes.
The magnitude scale is a
logarithmic scale.
Energy
flux (f) is the energy per unit
area per unit time received from a
star.
A difference of five magnitudes
corresponds to a factor of 100 in
energy flux.
f1
( m 2 m1 ) / 5
100
f2
2.2 The Electromagnetic Spectrum
Thomas Young - wave nature of light
Albert Einstein - photons
James Maxwell - electromagnetic theory
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
(Seven Forms of Light)
Radio Waves - communication
Microwaves - used to cook
Infrared - “heat waves”
Visible Light - detected by your eyes
Ultraviolet - causes sunburns
X-rays - penetrates tissue
Gamma Rays - most energetic
The Visible Spectrum
Wave Speed = Frequency Wavelength
c=n l
m/s
Hz
m
Questions
In
which of the seven forms of light….
…does our Sun have its peak
intensity?
…does our eyes have the greatest
sensitivity?
…is the Earth’s atmosphere fairly
transparent?
2.3 Colors of Stars
2.3.1 Quantifying Color
I(l) = Intensity Function versus Wavelength
I(n) = “
“
“
Frequency
2.3.2 Blackbodies
...objects that are ideal radiators when hot
...perfect absorbers when they are cool
Blackbody Examples:
light bulb filament
stove or horseshoe
stars (not perfect blackbodies)
Wien’s Law
“Hotter
bodies radiate more strongly
at shorter wavelengths.”
l maxT 2.9 10 A K
7
Star
temperatures range from
about 3000K to about 50,000K.
Star Colors
Reddish
coolest star
Orange-ish
Yellowish
White
Bluish
hottest star
Stefan-Boltzmann
Law - a star of
temperature T radiates an amount of
energy each second equal to sT4 per
square meter
Luminosity - the amount of energy
per second (or power) given off by a
star
L 4R sT
2
4
What is the luminosity of the Sun?
T = 5800K
R = 7 x 1010 cm
s = 5.7 x 10-5 erg/(cm2 K4 s)
2.4.1 Planck’s Law
Rayleigh-Jeans Law
I(n, T) 2kTn / c
2
2
k Boltzmann constant
Planck’s Equation
2hn / c
I(n, T)
exp( hn / kT) 1
3
2
h Planck' s constant
2.4.2 Photons
Photon energies are proportional to their
frequencies.
E hn
2.5 Stellar Colors
Color Index allows astronomers to
quantify color.
m2 m1 2.5 log( f1 / f 2 )
B V 2.5 log( f (l V ) / f (l B ))
Negative values for the color index
(B-V) correspond to blue stars.
2.6 Stellar Distances
Parsec - the distance from our Sun at which
the angle between the Earth and the Sun
subtends an angle of one arcsecond
1 arcsecond = 1/3600 degrees
1 parsec = 3.26 light years
Light-year - the distance that light travels
in one year
Measuring A Star’s Brightness
Inverse-Square Law - the apparent
brightness of a star decreases with
increasing distance from Earth
L
f
2
4d
Measuring a Star’s Distance
Parallax - the apparent change in the
position of a star due to the motion of the
Earth
Nearby objects exhibit more parallax that
remote ones.
1
Distance in Parsecs =
Parallax Angle in Arcseconds
1
d
p
2.7 Absolute Magnitudes
Distances to stars can be found from the
distance modulus,
m M 2.5 log( d / d o )
2
m M 5 log( d / 10pc)