Transcript document
Deducing Temperatures and
Luminosities of Stars
(and other objects…)
Review: Electromagnetic Radiation
Increasing energy
10-15 m
10-9 m
10-6 m
10-4 m
10-2 m
103 m
Increasing wavelength
• EM radiation is the combination of time- and space- varying
electric + magnetic fields that convey energy.
• Physicists often speak of the “particle-wave duality” of EM
radiation.
– Light can be considered as either particles (photons) or as waves,
depending on how it is measured
• Includes all of the above varieties -- the only distinction
between (for example) X-rays and radio waves is the
wavelength.
Electromagnetic Fields
Direction
of “Travel”
Sinusoidal Fields
• BOTH the electric field E and the magnetic
field B have “sinusoidal” shape
Wavelength of Sinusoidal Function
Wavelength is the distance between any two
identical points on a sinusoidal wave.
Frequency n of Sinusoidal Wave
time
1 unit of time
(e.g., 1 second)
Frequency: the number of wave cycles per unit of
time that are registered at a given point in space.
(referred to by Greek letter n [nu])
n is inversely proportional to wavelength
“Units” of Frequency
meters
c
second
n
meters
cycle
cycles
second
cycle
1
1
"Hertz"
(Hz)
second
Wavelength and Frequency Relation
Wavelength is proportional to the wave velocity v.
Wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency.
e.g., AM radio wave has long wavelength (~200
m), therefore it has “low” frequency (~1000 KHz
range).
If EM wave is not in vacuum, the equation
becomes
n
v
c
where v and n is the "refractive index"
n
Light as a Particle: Photons
Photons are little “packets” of energy.
Each photon’s energy is proportional to its
frequency.
Specifically, energy of each photon energy is
E = hn
Energy = (Planck’s constant) × (frequency of photon)
h 6.625 × 10-34 Joule-seconds = 6.625 × 10-27 Erg-seconds
Planck’s Radiation Law
• Every opaque object at temperature T > 0 K (a human, a
planet, a star) radiates a characteristic spectrum of EM
radiation
– spectrum = intensity of radiation as a function of wavelength
– spectrum depends only on temperature of the object
• This type of spectrum is called blackbody radiation
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/PlanckLaw.html
Planck’s Radiation Law
• Wavelength of MAXIMUM emission max
is characteristic of temperature T
• Wavelength max as T
max
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/PlanckLaw.html
Sidebar: The Actual Equation
B T
2hc
2
1
5
e
hc
kT
1
• Two “competing” terms that only depend on
wavelength and temperature
• Constants:
– h = Planck’s constant = 6.63 ×10-34 Joule - seconds
– k = Boltzmann’s constant = 1.38 ×10-23 Joules -K-1
– c = velocity of light = 3 ×10+8 meter - seconds-1
Temperature dependence
of blackbody radiation
• As temperature T of an object increases:
– Peak of blackbody spectrum (Planck function) moves to
shorter wavelengths (higher energies)
– Each unit area of object emits more energy (more
photons) at all wavelengths
Shape of Planck Curve
http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/guidry/java/planck/planck.html
• “Normalized” Planck curve for T = 5700 K
– Maximum value set to 1
• Note that maximum intensity occurs in visible
region of spectrum
Planck Curve for T = 7000 K
http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/guidry/java/planck/planck.html
• This graph also “normalized” to 1 at maximum
• Maximum intensity occurs at shorter
wavelength
– boundary of ultraviolet (UV) and visible
Planck Functions Displayed on
Logarithmic Scale
http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/guidry/java/planck/planck.html
• Graphs for T = 5700 K and 7000 K displayed on
same logarithmic scale without normalizing
– Note that curve for T = 7000 K is “higher” and peaks
“to the left”
Features of Graph of Planck Law
T1 < T2 (e.g., T1 = 5700 K, T2 = 7000 K)
• Maximum of curve for higher temperature
occurs at SHORTER wavelength :
– max(T = T1) > max(T = T2) if T1 < T2
• Curve for higher temperature is higher at
ALL WAVELENGTHS
More light emitted at all if T is larger
– Not apparent from normalized curves, must
examine “unnormalized” curves, usually on
logarithmic scale
Wavelength of Maximum Emission
Wien’s Displacement Law
• Obtained by evaluating derivative of Planck Law
over T
2.898 10
max [ meters
T [K
3
(recall that human vision ranges from 400 to 700 nm, or
0.4 to 0.7 microns)
Wien’s Displacement Law
• Can calculate where the peak of the blackbody
spectrum will lie for a given temperature from
Wien’s Law:
2.898 10
max [ meters
T [K
3
(recall that human vision ranges from 400 to 700 nm, or
0.4 to 0.7 microns)
max for T = 5700 K
• Wavelength of Maximum Emission is:
max
3
2.898 10
m
5700
0.508 m 508nm
(in the visible region of the spectrum)
max for T = 7000 K
• Wavelength of Maximum Emission is:
max
3
2.898 10
m
7000
0.414 m 414nm
(very short blue wavelength, almost ultraviolet)
Wavelength of Maximum
Emission for Low Temperatures
• If T << 5000 K (say, 2000 K), the wavelength of
the maximum of the spectrum is:
max
3
2.898 10
m 1.45 m 1450nm
2000
(in the “near infrared” region of the spectrum)
• The visible light from this star appears “reddish”
Why are Cool Stars “Red”?
Less light in blue
Star appears “reddish”
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
(m)
Visible Region
0.9
1.0
1.1
1.2
1.3
max
Wavelength of Maximum
Emission for High Temperatures
• T >> 5000 K (say, 15,000 K), wavelength of
maximum “brightness” is:
max
3
2.898 10
m 0.193 m 193nm
15000
“Ultraviolet” region of the spectrum
Star emits more blue light than red appears “bluish”
Why are Hotter Stars “Blue”?
More light in blue
Star appears “bluish”
0.1
0.2
0.3
max
0.4
0.5
0.6
(m)
Visible Region
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
Betelguese and Rigel in Orion
Betelgeuse: 3,000 K
(a red supergiant)
Rigel: 30,000 K
(a blue supergiant)
Blackbody curves for stars at
temperatures of Betelgeuse and Rigel
Stellar Luminosity
• Sum of all light emitted over all wavelengths is
the luminosity
– brightness per unit surface area
– luminosity is proportional to T4: L = T4
Joules
8
5.67
10
,
Stefan-Boltzmann
constant
m 2 -sec-K 4
– L can be measured in watts
• often expressed in units of Sun’s luminosity LSun
– L measures star’s “intrinsic” brightness, rather than
“apparent” brightness seen from Earth
Stellar Luminosity – Hotter Stars
• Hotter stars emit more light per unit area of its
surface at all wavelengths
– T4 -law means that small increase in temperature T
produces BIG increase in luminosity L
– Slightly hotter stars are much brighter (per unit
surface area)
Two stars with Same Diameter
but Different T
• Hotter Star emits MUCH more light per unit
area much brighter
Stars with Same Temperature and
Different Diameters
• Area of star increases with radius ( R2,
where R is star’s radius)
• Measured brightness increases with surface
area
• If two stars have same T but different
luminosities (per unit surface area), then the
MORE luminous star must be LARGER.
How do we know that Betelgeuse
is much, much bigger than Rigel?
• Rigel is about 10 times hotter than Betelgeuse
– Measured from its color
– Rigel gives off 104 (=10,000) times more energy
per unit surface area than Betelgeuse
• But the two stars have equal total luminosities
• Betelguese must be about 102 (=100) times
larger in radius than Rigel
– to ensure that emits same amount of light over
entire surface
So far we haven’t considered
stellar distances...
• Two otherwise identical stars (same radius,
same temperature same luminosity) will
still appear vastly different in brightness if
their distances from Earth are different
• Reason: intensity of light inversely
proportional to the square of the distance
the light has to travel
– Light waves from point sources are surfaces of
expanding spheres
Stellar Brightness Differences are
“Tools”, not “Problems”
• If we can determine that 2 stars are identical, then
their relative brightness translates to relative
distances
• Example: Sun vs. Cen
– spectra are very similar temperatures, radii almost
identical (T follows from Planck function, radius R can
be deduced by other means)
– luminosities about equal
– difference in apparent magnitudes translates to relative
distances
– Can check using the parallax distance to Cen
Plot Brightness and Temperature on
“Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram”
http://zebu.uoregon.edu/~soper/Stars/hrdiagram.html
H-R Diagram
• 1911: E. Hertzsprung (Denmark) compared
star luminosity with color for several
clusters
• 1913: Henry Norris Russell (U.S.) did same
for stars in solar neighborhood
Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
“Clusters” on H-R Diagram
• n.b., NOT like “open clusters” or
“globular clusters”
• Rather are “groupings” of stars
with similar properties
• Similar to a “histogram”
90% of stars on Main Sequence
10% are White Dwarfs
<1% are Giants
http://www.anzwers.org/free/universe/hr.html
H-R Diagram
• Vertical Axis luminosity of star
– could be measured as power, e.g., watts
– or in “absolute magnitude”
Lstar
– or in units of Sun's luminosity:
LSun
Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
H-R Diagram
• Horizontal Axis surface temperature
–
–
–
–
Sometimes measured in Kelvins.
T traditionally increases to the LEFT
Normally T given as a ``ratio scale'‘
Sometimes use “Spectral Class”
• OBAFGKM
– “Oh, Be A Fine Girl, Kiss Me”
– Could also use luminosities measured through
color filters
“Standard” Astronomical Filter Set
• 5 “Bessel” Filters with approximately equal
“passbands”: 100 nm
–
–
–
–
–
–
U: “ultraviolet”, max 350 nm
B: “blue”, max 450 nm
V: “visible” (= “green”), max 550 nm
R: “red”, max 650 nm
I: “infrared, max 750 nm
sometimes “II”, farther infrared, max 850 nm
Filter
Transmittances
U,B,V,R,I,II Filters
Transmission (%)
100
100
U
Visible Light
Transmittance (%)
90
V
R
80
B
II
I
R
I
II
70
50
V
B
60
U
50
40
30
20
10
0
0
200
200
300
300
400
400
500
500
600
600
700
700
800
800
Wavelength (nm)
Wavelength
(nm)
900
900
1000
1000
1100
1100
Measure of Color
• If image of a star is:
• Star is BLUISH
and hotter
L(star) / L(Sun)
– Bright when viewed through blue filter
– “Fainter” through “visible”
– “Fainter” yet in red
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
(m)
Visible Region
0.7
0.8
Measure of Color
• If image of a star is:
• Star is REDDISH
and cooler
L(star) / L(Sun)
– Faintest when viewed through blue filter
– Somewhat brighter through “visible”
– Brightest in red
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
(m)
Visible Region
0.7
0.8
How to Measure Color of Star
• Measure brightness of stellar images taken
through colored filters
– used to be measured from photographic plates
– now done “photoelectrically” or from CCD
images
• Compute “Color Indices”
– Blue – Visible (B – V)
– Ultraviolet – Blue (U – B)
– Plot (U – V) vs. (B – V)