Astro 1050     Wed. Oct. 22, 2003
   Today:  Finish Chapter 9, Stellar Structure
HW discussion
Review with time remaining

Mass-Luminosity relationship
L µ M3.5 Why?
Higher mass means higher internal pressure
Higher pressure goes with higher temperature
Higher temperature means heat leaks out faster
Star shrinks until T inside is high enough for
fusion rate (which is very sensitive to temperature)
to balance heat leak rate

Lifetime on Main Sequence
L µ M3.5 T µ fuel / L = M/M3.5 = M-2.5
Example:  M=2 MSun      L = 11.3 LSun        T =1/5.7  TSun

How about a 0.5 solar mass star?
M = 0.5 Msun
Time =
Luminosity =

How about a 0.5 solar mass star?
M = 0.5 Msun
Time = 5.7 times solar lifetime
Luminosity = 0.09 solar luminosity

Width of Main Sequence – and Stellar Aging
As star converts H to He you have more massive nuclei
Pressure related to number of nuclei
Gravity related to mass of nuclei
Pressure would tend to drop unless something else happens
Temperature must rise (slightly) to compensate
Luminosity  must  rise (slightly) as heat leaks out faster

Orion Nebula: A Star-Forming Region
Red light = Hydrogen emission
Blue light = reflection nebula
Dark lanes = dust
Astronomy Picture of the Day:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod

Protoplanetary Disks in the Orion Nebula
Dusty disk seen in silhouette
Central star visible at long wavelengths

Herbig-Haro objects: The angular momentum problem
As clouds try to collapse angular momentum makes them spin faster
A disk forms around the protostar
Material is ejected along the rotation axis

Herbig-Haro 34 in Orion
Jet along the axis visible as red
Lobes at each end where jets run into surrounding gas clouds

Motion of Herbig-Haro 34 in Orion
Can actually see the knots in the jet move with time
In time jets, UV photons, supernova, will disrupt the stellar nursery

Homework #6
Won’t go through solutions here, but we can visit WebCT for specific problems and discuss their solution.  Particularly issues so far seem to involve spectroscopic parallax and density.

For Exam #2:
“Essay Questions” (2) will involve at least some of the topics below:
Temperature of Stars
Binary Stars
HR Diagram
Ages/Lifetimes of Stars
Stellar Fusion

Review Chapters 5-9
Chapter 5: Astronomical Tools
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Optical Telescopes
Resolving Power of Telescopes
Space Astronomy
(No Questions about Pink Floyd or the Dark Side of the Moon!)

Review Chapters 5-9
Chapter 6: Starlight and Atoms
Model Atom, Energy Levels
Absorption Lines
Blackbody Spectrum
Wien’s Law
Steffan-Boltzmann Law
Temperature of Stars
Wien’s Law, the Balmer “Thermometer”
Stellar Classification (OBAFGKM)
Doppler Effect

Review Chapters 5-9
Chapter 7: The Sun
Atmospheric Structure
Sunspots/Magnetic Phenomena
Nuclear Fusion – proton-proton chain
Solar Neutrino “Problem”

Review Chapters 5-9
Chapter 8: The Properties of Stars
Distances to Stars
Parallax and Parsecs
Spectroscopic Parallax
Intrinsic Brightness: Luminosity
Absolute Magnitude
Luminosity, Radius, and Temperature
Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram
Luminosity Classes (e.g., Main Sequence, giant)
Masses of Stars
Binary Stars and Kepler’s Law
Mass-Luminosity Relationship

Review Chapters 5-9
Ch. 9: The Formation & Structure of Stars
Interstellar Medium
Types of Nebulae (emission, reflection, dark)
Interstellar Reddening from dust
Star formation
Protostar Evolution on H-R Diagram
Fusion (CNO cycle, etc.)
Pressure-Temperature “Thermostat”
Stellar Structure (hydrostatic equilibrium, etc.)
Convection, radiation, and opacity
Stellar Lifetimes