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E3

          Astronomical distances
The SI unit for length, the metre, is a very small unit
to measure astronomical distances. There units usually
used is astronomy:
The Astronomical Unit (AU) – this is the average distance
between the Earth and the Sun. This unit is more used within
the Solar System.



1 AU = 150 000 000 km
          or
   1 AU = 1.5x1011m
E3

           Astronomical distances
The light year (ly) – this is the distance travelled by the
light in one year.

         c = 3x108 m/s
         t = 1 year = 365.25 x 24 x 60 x 60= 3.16 x 107 s

         Speed =Distance / Time

         Distance = Speed x Time
                  = 3x108 x 3.16 x 107 = 9.46 x 1015 m



                     1 ly = 9.46x1015 m
E3.1

          Astronomical distances
The parsec (pc) – this is the
distance at which 1 AU subtends an
angle of 1 arcsencond.


       “Parsec” is short for
       parallax arcsecond



      1 pc = 3.086x1016 m
                 or
          1 pc = 3.26 ly
E3.1

                  Angular sizes
 360 degrees (360o)
  in a circle

 60 arcminutes (60’)
  in a degree

 60 arcseconds
  (60”) in an
  arcminute
E3.1


1 parsec = 3.086 X 1016 metres
                   Nearest Star
                     1.3 pc

                  (206,000 times
                    further than
                    the Earth is
                    from the Sun)
E3.2

               Parallax
Bjork’s Eyes   Where star/ball    Space
               appears relative
                to background

                Angle star/ball
                 appears to
                    shift
                 Distance to
                  star/ball


                 “Baseline”
E3.2

                    Parallax

  Parallax, more accurately
motion parallax, is the change of
angular position of two
observations of a single object
relative to each other as seen by
an observer, caused by the
motion of the observer.
  Simply put, it is the apparent
shift of an object against the
background that is caused by a
change in the observer's position.
E3.2

                      Parallax
We know how big the Earth’s orbit is, we measure the shift
(parallax), and then we get the distance…

                                                          Parallax - p
                                                           (Angle)




                                  Distance to
                                    Star - d
                                                Baseline – R
                                                (Earth’s orbit)
E3.2

                        Parallax
                  R (Baseline)
 tan p (Parallax)
                  d (Distance)

For very small angles tan p ≈ p

                R
           p
                d

In conventional units it means that
                       11
                1.5 x 10                   16
 1 pc                     m       3.086 x 10 m
               2       1
               360 3600
E3.2

               Parallax
               11
        1.5 x 10                      16
1 pc              m          3.086 x 10 m
       2       1
       360 3600


           R                 R
       p                 d
           d                 p



                         1
       d (parsec)
                  p ( arcsecond)
E3.3

             Parallax has its limits
  The farther away
   an object gets,
   the smaller its
        shift.



Eventually, the shift
is too small to see.
Another thing we can figure out
    about stars is their colors…

                 We’ve figured out
                 brightness, but stars
                 don’t put out an equal
                 amount of all light…


                 …some put out more
                 blue light, while
                 others put out more
                 red light!
Usually, what we know is how             E3.5



bright the star looks to us here
on Earth…

                      We call this its
                    Apparent Magnitude


                      “What you see is
                       what you get…”
E3.5

The Magnitude Scale
                  Magnitudes are a way of
                   assigning a number to a star so
                   we know how bright it is
                  Similar to how the Richter scale
                   assigns a number to the
                   strength of an earthquake

Betelgeuse and Rigel,
 stars in Orion with
apparent magnitudes     This is the “8.9”
     0.3 and 0.9         earthquake off
                            of Sumatra
E3.5

The historical magnitude scale…
 Greeks ordered the    Magnitude   Description
  stars in the sky
                        1st         The 20 brightest
  from brightest to                 stars
  faintest…             2nd         stars less bright
                                    than the 20
                                    brightest
                        3rd         and so on...
   …so brighter stars
                        4th         getting dimmer
        have smaller                each time
        magnitudes.     5th         and more in each
                                    group, until
                        6th         the dimmest stars
                                    (depending on your
                                    eyesight)
E3.5


Later, astronomers quantified
         this system.
 Because stars have such a wide range in
  brightness, magnitudes are on a “log scale”
 Every one magnitude corresponds to a factor
  of 2.5 change in brightness
 Every 5 magnitudes is a factor of 100 change
  in brightness

  (because (2.5)5 = 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 = 100)
E3.5
Brighter = Smaller magnitudes
Fainter = Bigger magnitudes
          Magnitudes can even be negative for
           really bright stuff!

    Object                       Apparent Magnitude
    The Sun                      -26.8
    Full Moon                    -12.6
    Venus (at brightest)         -4.4
    Sirius (brightest star)      -1.5
    Faintest naked eye stars     6 to 7


    Faintest star visible from   ~25
    Earth telescopes
E3.5
 However:
 knowing how bright a star looks
 doesn’t really tell us anything
 about the star itself!
We’d really like to know things that are
    intrinsic properties of the star like:

           Luminosity (energy output)
                                      and
                          Temperature
In order to get from how
bright something looks…




                to how much energy
                it’s putting out…



  …we need to know its distance!
E3.6

The whole point of knowing the
distance using the parallax method is
to figure out luminosity…
                                    Once we have both
                               brightness and distance,
 It is often helpful to put             we can do that!
 luminosity on the magnitude
 scale…


              Absolute Magnitude:
      The magnitude an object would have if
       we put it 10 parsecs away from Earth
E3.6

           Absolute Magnitude (M)
                   removes the effect of distance
                                 and
                   puts stars on a common scale
                                        The Sun is -26.5 in
                                         apparent magnitude,
                                         but would be 4.4 if we
                                         moved it far away
                                        Aldebaran is farther
                                         than 10pc, so it’s
                                         absolute magnitude is
                                         brighter than its
                                         apparent magnitude
Remember magnitude scale is “backwards”
E3.6

         Absolute Magnitude (M)
Knowing the apparent magnitude (m) and the
distance in pc (d) of a star its absolute magnitude (M)
can be found using the following equation:

                   m M 5log 10
                             d



Example: Find the absolute magnitude of the Sun.
   The apparent magnitude is -26.7
   The distance of the Sun from the Earth is 1 AU = 4.9x10-6 pc
   Therefore,          M= -26.7 – log (4.9x10-6) + 5 =
                         = +4.8
E3.6


So we have three ways of
talking about brightness:
 Apparent Magnitude - How bright a star
  looks from Earth

 Luminosity - How much energy a star
  puts out per second

 Absolute Magnitude - How bright a star
  would look if it was 10 parsecs away
E3.9

        Spectroscopic parallax
 Spectroscopic parallax is an astronomical
  method for measuring the distances to stars.
  Despite its name, it does not rely on the
  apparent change in the position of the star.

 This technique can be applied to any main
  sequence star for which a spectrum can be
  recorded.
E3.9

         Spectroscopic parallax
The Luminosity of a star can be found using an
absorption spectrum.

Using its spectrum a star can be placed in a spectral
class.

Also the star’s surface temperature can determined
from its spectrum (Wien’s law)

Using the H-R diagram and knowing both
temperature and spectral class of the star, its
luminosity can be found.
E3.13

         Types of Stars (review)
 Cepheid variables
    Cepheid variables are stars of
    variable luminosity. The luminosity
    increases sharply and falls of
    gently with a well-defined period.
    The period is related to the
    absolute luminosity of the star and
    so can be used to estimate the
    distance to the star.
    A Cepheid is usually a giant yellow star, pulsing regularly
    by expanding and contracting, resulting in a regular
    oscillation of its luminosity. The luminosity of Cepheid
    stars range from 103 to 104 times that of the Sun.
E3.13

                Cepheid variables
   The relationship between a Cepheid
variable's luminosity and variability period is
quite precise, and has been used as a
standard candle (astronomical object that has
a know luminosity) for almost a century.
   This connection was
discovered in 1912 by
Henrietta Swan Leavitt.
She measured the
brightness of hundreds
of Cepheid variables
and discovered a
distinct period-
luminosity relationship.
E3.13
E3.14

               Cepheid variables
A three-day period Cepheid has a luminosity of about 800
times that of the Sun.

A thirty-day period Cepheid is 10,000 times as bright as the
Sun.

The scale has been calibrated using nearby Cepheid stars, for
which the distance was already known.

This high luminosity, and the precision with which their
distance can be estimated, makes Cepheid stars the ideal
standard candle to measure the distance of clusters and
external galaxies.
E3.14

Cepheid variables
E3.14
E3 Summary
Distance measured by parallax:
  Distance
measurement        apparent        spectrum
 by parallax      brightness
                                                     Chemical
                                                    composition
                                  Wien’s Law         of corona
                  Luminosity
  d=1/p                             (surface
                  L = 4πd2 b     temperature T)




                                        L = 4πR2 σT4
                                     Stefan-Boltzmann


                                           Radius
E3 Summary
Distance measured by spectroscopic parallax / Cepheid variables:

    Apparent
                     Luminosity      spectrum           Chemical
   brightness
                       class                           composition

                                    Spectral type
          Cepheid
          variable
                        H-R        Surface temperature (T)
          Period      diagram
                                          Wien’s Law

                     Luminosity
                        (L)             Stefan-Boltzmann
  b = L / 4πd2                            L = 4πR2 σT4


 Distance (d)
                                             Radius

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E3 - Stellar Distances

  • 1. E3 Astronomical distances The SI unit for length, the metre, is a very small unit to measure astronomical distances. There units usually used is astronomy: The Astronomical Unit (AU) – this is the average distance between the Earth and the Sun. This unit is more used within the Solar System. 1 AU = 150 000 000 km or 1 AU = 1.5x1011m
  • 2. E3 Astronomical distances The light year (ly) – this is the distance travelled by the light in one year. c = 3x108 m/s t = 1 year = 365.25 x 24 x 60 x 60= 3.16 x 107 s Speed =Distance / Time Distance = Speed x Time = 3x108 x 3.16 x 107 = 9.46 x 1015 m 1 ly = 9.46x1015 m
  • 3. E3.1 Astronomical distances The parsec (pc) – this is the distance at which 1 AU subtends an angle of 1 arcsencond. “Parsec” is short for parallax arcsecond 1 pc = 3.086x1016 m or 1 pc = 3.26 ly
  • 4. E3.1 Angular sizes  360 degrees (360o) in a circle  60 arcminutes (60’) in a degree  60 arcseconds (60”) in an arcminute
  • 5. E3.1 1 parsec = 3.086 X 1016 metres  Nearest Star 1.3 pc (206,000 times further than the Earth is from the Sun)
  • 6. E3.2 Parallax Bjork’s Eyes Where star/ball Space appears relative to background Angle star/ball appears to shift Distance to star/ball “Baseline”
  • 7. E3.2 Parallax Parallax, more accurately motion parallax, is the change of angular position of two observations of a single object relative to each other as seen by an observer, caused by the motion of the observer. Simply put, it is the apparent shift of an object against the background that is caused by a change in the observer's position.
  • 8. E3.2 Parallax We know how big the Earth’s orbit is, we measure the shift (parallax), and then we get the distance… Parallax - p (Angle) Distance to Star - d Baseline – R (Earth’s orbit)
  • 9. E3.2 Parallax R (Baseline) tan p (Parallax) d (Distance) For very small angles tan p ≈ p R p d In conventional units it means that 11 1.5 x 10 16 1 pc m 3.086 x 10 m 2 1 360 3600
  • 10. E3.2 Parallax 11 1.5 x 10 16 1 pc m 3.086 x 10 m 2 1 360 3600 R R p d d p 1 d (parsec) p ( arcsecond)
  • 11. E3.3 Parallax has its limits The farther away an object gets, the smaller its shift. Eventually, the shift is too small to see.
  • 12. Another thing we can figure out about stars is their colors… We’ve figured out brightness, but stars don’t put out an equal amount of all light… …some put out more blue light, while others put out more red light!
  • 13. Usually, what we know is how E3.5 bright the star looks to us here on Earth… We call this its Apparent Magnitude “What you see is what you get…”
  • 14. E3.5 The Magnitude Scale  Magnitudes are a way of assigning a number to a star so we know how bright it is  Similar to how the Richter scale assigns a number to the strength of an earthquake Betelgeuse and Rigel, stars in Orion with apparent magnitudes This is the “8.9” 0.3 and 0.9 earthquake off of Sumatra
  • 15. E3.5 The historical magnitude scale…  Greeks ordered the Magnitude Description stars in the sky 1st The 20 brightest from brightest to stars faintest… 2nd stars less bright than the 20 brightest 3rd and so on... …so brighter stars 4th getting dimmer have smaller each time magnitudes. 5th and more in each group, until 6th the dimmest stars (depending on your eyesight)
  • 16. E3.5 Later, astronomers quantified this system.  Because stars have such a wide range in brightness, magnitudes are on a “log scale”  Every one magnitude corresponds to a factor of 2.5 change in brightness  Every 5 magnitudes is a factor of 100 change in brightness (because (2.5)5 = 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 = 100)
  • 17. E3.5 Brighter = Smaller magnitudes Fainter = Bigger magnitudes  Magnitudes can even be negative for really bright stuff! Object Apparent Magnitude The Sun -26.8 Full Moon -12.6 Venus (at brightest) -4.4 Sirius (brightest star) -1.5 Faintest naked eye stars 6 to 7 Faintest star visible from ~25 Earth telescopes
  • 18. E3.5 However: knowing how bright a star looks doesn’t really tell us anything about the star itself! We’d really like to know things that are intrinsic properties of the star like: Luminosity (energy output) and Temperature
  • 19. In order to get from how bright something looks… to how much energy it’s putting out… …we need to know its distance!
  • 20. E3.6 The whole point of knowing the distance using the parallax method is to figure out luminosity… Once we have both brightness and distance, It is often helpful to put we can do that! luminosity on the magnitude scale… Absolute Magnitude: The magnitude an object would have if we put it 10 parsecs away from Earth
  • 21. E3.6 Absolute Magnitude (M) removes the effect of distance and puts stars on a common scale  The Sun is -26.5 in apparent magnitude, but would be 4.4 if we moved it far away  Aldebaran is farther than 10pc, so it’s absolute magnitude is brighter than its apparent magnitude Remember magnitude scale is “backwards”
  • 22. E3.6 Absolute Magnitude (M) Knowing the apparent magnitude (m) and the distance in pc (d) of a star its absolute magnitude (M) can be found using the following equation: m M 5log 10 d Example: Find the absolute magnitude of the Sun. The apparent magnitude is -26.7 The distance of the Sun from the Earth is 1 AU = 4.9x10-6 pc Therefore, M= -26.7 – log (4.9x10-6) + 5 = = +4.8
  • 23. E3.6 So we have three ways of talking about brightness:  Apparent Magnitude - How bright a star looks from Earth  Luminosity - How much energy a star puts out per second  Absolute Magnitude - How bright a star would look if it was 10 parsecs away
  • 24. E3.9 Spectroscopic parallax  Spectroscopic parallax is an astronomical method for measuring the distances to stars. Despite its name, it does not rely on the apparent change in the position of the star.  This technique can be applied to any main sequence star for which a spectrum can be recorded.
  • 25. E3.9 Spectroscopic parallax The Luminosity of a star can be found using an absorption spectrum. Using its spectrum a star can be placed in a spectral class. Also the star’s surface temperature can determined from its spectrum (Wien’s law) Using the H-R diagram and knowing both temperature and spectral class of the star, its luminosity can be found.
  • 26. E3.13 Types of Stars (review)  Cepheid variables Cepheid variables are stars of variable luminosity. The luminosity increases sharply and falls of gently with a well-defined period. The period is related to the absolute luminosity of the star and so can be used to estimate the distance to the star. A Cepheid is usually a giant yellow star, pulsing regularly by expanding and contracting, resulting in a regular oscillation of its luminosity. The luminosity of Cepheid stars range from 103 to 104 times that of the Sun.
  • 27. E3.13 Cepheid variables The relationship between a Cepheid variable's luminosity and variability period is quite precise, and has been used as a standard candle (astronomical object that has a know luminosity) for almost a century. This connection was discovered in 1912 by Henrietta Swan Leavitt. She measured the brightness of hundreds of Cepheid variables and discovered a distinct period- luminosity relationship.
  • 28. E3.13
  • 29. E3.14 Cepheid variables A three-day period Cepheid has a luminosity of about 800 times that of the Sun. A thirty-day period Cepheid is 10,000 times as bright as the Sun. The scale has been calibrated using nearby Cepheid stars, for which the distance was already known. This high luminosity, and the precision with which their distance can be estimated, makes Cepheid stars the ideal standard candle to measure the distance of clusters and external galaxies.
  • 31. E3.14
  • 32. E3 Summary Distance measured by parallax: Distance measurement apparent spectrum by parallax brightness Chemical composition Wien’s Law of corona Luminosity d=1/p (surface L = 4πd2 b temperature T) L = 4πR2 σT4 Stefan-Boltzmann Radius
  • 33. E3 Summary Distance measured by spectroscopic parallax / Cepheid variables: Apparent Luminosity spectrum Chemical brightness class composition Spectral type Cepheid variable H-R Surface temperature (T) Period diagram Wien’s Law Luminosity (L) Stefan-Boltzmann b = L / 4πd2 L = 4πR2 σT4 Distance (d) Radius