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Cosmology

Cosmology. How big is the Universe. Astronomical distances. The SI unit for length, the meter, is a very small unit to measure astronomical distances. These are the units usually used is astronomy:

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Cosmology

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  1. Cosmology How big is the Universe

  2. Astronomical distances The SI unit for length, the meter, is a very small unit to measure astronomical distances. These are the 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 = 1.5x1011 m

  3. Astronomical distances 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 • The light year (ly) – this is the distance travelled by the light in one year. 1 l y = 9.46x1015 m • The distance from the Earth to the nearest star (Alpha Centauri A or B) after our Sun is 4.3 ly. • The Milky Way Galaxy is about 150,000 light-years across • The andromeda galaxy is 2.3 million light-years away. • The edge of the observable universe is 46.5 Giga light years away.

  4. Parallax

  5. Parallax/Trigonometric parallax 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.

  6. Trigonometric parallax To measure the distance to relatively close stars, astronomers use a method known as trigonometric parallax. Explanation: As the Earth moves around the Sun, a relatively close star will appear to move across the background of more distant stars. This optical illusion is used to determine the distance of the star. The star itself does not move significantly during the course of the observations.

  7. Trigonometric parallax

  8. To determine the trigonometric parallax the angle to the star is measured and the change in that angle is observed as the position of the Earth changes. We know that in six months the Earth will be exactly on the opposite side of its orbit ,and therefore will be two astronomical units from its location. • Using these observations,the angle between the star and the Earth in these two different positions in space,six months apart is measured.As the size of the Earth’s orbit is known, the distance to the star is calculated using trigonometry.

  9. Parallax angle • Tan p P (in rads) r (=1 AU) d

  10. Parallax Space Where star/ball appears relative to background Angle star/ball appears to shift Distance to star/ball “Baseline”

  11. 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)

  12. Parallax Where r=the radius of the Earth’s orbit Thismethodworkswell for close stars upto few hundred pc. If any farther, parallax angle is too small to detect.

  13. Minutes of arc & seconds of arc

  14. A parsec(pc) is a measure of distance. It is an abbreviation of ‘parallax second’ The parsec (pc) – this is the distance at which 1 AU subtends an angle of 1 arc second or it is the distance a star must be from the Sun in order for the angle Earth-star-sun to be 1 arcsecond. • d (parsecs) = 1/p(in arcsecs)

  15. 1 parsec=1.5x 1011 /tan(1/3600) =3.06 x 1016 m1 light year=3x108 x365x24x60x60 1 parsec=3.26 light years

  16. 1 parsec(pc)=3.086 X 1016 metres • Nearest Star 1.3 pc (206,000 times further than the Earth is from the Sun)

  17. Parallax has its limits The farther away an object gets, the smaller its shift. Eventually, the shift is too small to see.

  18. Quick Reference • 0.5 degree The width of a full Moon, as viewed from the Earth's surface, is about 0.5 degree. The width of the Sun, as viewed from the Earth's surface, is also about 0.5 degree. • 1.5 degrees Hold your hand at arm's length, and extend your pinky finger. The width of your pinky finger is about 1.5 degrees. • 5 degrees Hold your hand at arm's length, and extend your middle, ring, and pinky fingers, with the three fingers touching. The width of your three fingers is about 5 degrees. • 10 degrees Hold your hand at arm's length, and make a fist with your thumb tucked over (or under) your other fingers. The width of your fist is about 10 degrees. • 20 degrees Hold your hand at arm's length, and extend your thumb and pinky finger. The distance between the tip of your thumb and the tip of your pinky finger is about 20 degrees.

  19. Parallax Experiment • Using the quick reference angles that I gave you determine how far something is away near your house based on the parallax method. Include a schematic to show the placement of all objects. Your schematic should include relevant distances and calculations.

  20. Flux and luminosity • Luminosity - A star produces light – the total amount of energy that a star emits out as light each second is called its Luminosity. Its unit is watt(W).The luminosity of the Sun is 3.90 x 10 26 W. • Radiation flux - If we have a light detector (eye, camera, telescope) we can measure the light produced by the star – the total amount of energy intercepted by the detector divided by the area of the detector is called the flux. Its unit is W/m2 .The radiation flux received from the Sun is about 1000 Wm -2

  21. Flux and luminosity • To find the luminosity, we take a shell which completely encloses the star and measure all the light passing through the shell • To find the flux, we take our detector at some particular distance from the star and measure the light passing only through the detector. How bright a star looks to us is determined by its flux, not its luminosity. Brightness = Flux.

  22. F and L are linked by inverse square law Flux decreases as we get farther from the star – like 1/distance2.

  23. Standardcandle: The problem in using the flux equation to measure how far away a star is how to determine the star’s full output power-its luminosity L. The luminosity of some stars can be determined separately from other measurements. These stars are known as standard candles. In astrophysics, a standard candle is a distant star of known luminosity. If we see one star in a galaxy, we can then calculate the distance to the star, and therefore the distance to the galaxy. This method is suitable upto 29 Mpc. Two of the most important std candles are Cepheid variables and type 1 A supernovae.

  24. At distances greater than 29Mpc, trigonometric parallax cannot be relied upon to measure the distance to a star. • When we observe another galaxy, all of the stars in that galaxy are approximately the same distance away from the earth. What we really need is a light source of known luminosity in the galaxy. If we had this then we could make comparisons with the other stars and judge their luminosities. In other words we need a ‘standard candle’ –that is a star of known luminosity. • The outer layers of Cepheid variable stars undergo periodic expansion and contraction, producing a periodic variation in its luminosity.

  25. Cepheid variables: to be calculated.

  26. Cepheid variable stars are useful to astronomers because of the period of their variation in luminosity turns out to be related to the absolute magnitude(the actual brightness of a star)of the Cepheid. Thus the luminosity of the Cepheid can be calculated by observing the variation in brightness.

  27. The process of estimating the distance to a galaxy (in which the individual stars can be imagined) might be as follows: • Locate a Cepheid variable in the galaxy • Measure the variation in brightness over a given period of time. • Use the luminosity-period relationship for Cepheids to estimate the star’s luminosity. • Use the luminosity, the brightness and the inverse square law to estimate the distance to the star.

  28. Cepheid calculation - Example

  29. From the left-hand graph we can see that the period of the cepheid is 5.4 days. From the second graph we can see that this corresponds to a luminosity of about 103 suns (3.9 x 1029 W).

  30. Now using the relationship between apparent brightness, luminosity and distance D = (L/(4πF))½ D = (3.9 x 1029/(4 x π x 9.15 x 10-10))½ D= 5.8 x 1018 m = 615 ly = 189 pc

  31. Supernova explosions

  32. Supernova explosions type Ia • Supernova explosions (type Ia)can be used as standard candles to find the distance to the more distant galaxies, as it is believed that the maximum luminosity of these exploding stars is same all over the universe. Type Ia is used to measure the rate of expansion of the universe.

  33. Brightness • Some stars are so bright that you can see them even in a lighted city, while others are so dim that you can only see them through a telescope. • A star’s brightness depends on three things: • how big the star is (size) • how hot the star is (temperature) • how far away from Earth the star is (distance)

  34. Brightness cont. The bigger and hotter the star, the more light it gives off. However, brightness also depends on distance. A star that is nearer to Earth looks brighter than one that gives off the same amount of light, but is farther away.

  35. Usually, what we know is how bright the star looks to us here on Earth… We call this its Apparent Magnitude

  36. The Magnitude Scale • Magnitudes are a way of assigning a number to a star so we know how bright it is. Logarithmic scale is used to tell how bright a star looks. • Similar to how the Richter scale assigns a number to the strength of an earthquake Betelgeuse and Rigel, stars in Orion with apparent magnitudes 0.3 and 0.9 This is the “8.9” earthquake off of Sumatra

  37. Magnitude Absolute magnitude is the actual amount of light that a star gives off. Apparent magnitude is the amount of a star’s light that is observed on Earth. If two stars are the same distance from Earth, the one with the greatest absolute magnitude will be the brightest. If one star is farther away than the other, the one that is closer will appear the brightest even if it puts off less light or has less absolute magnitude. Or how bright it would appear if it was at a distance of 10 pc away from Earth.

  38. The historical magnitude scale… • Greeks ordered the stars in the sky from brightest to faintest… …so brighter stars have smaller magnitudes.

  39. 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)

  40. Example:

  41. Brighter = Smaller magnitudesFainter = Bigger magnitudes • Magnitudes can even be negative for really bright stuff!

  42. 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) andTemperature

  43. In order to get from how bright something looks… …we need to know its distance! to how much energy it’s putting out…

  44. The whole point of knowing the distance using the parallax method is to figure out luminosity… Once we have both brightness and distance, we can do that! It is often helpful to put luminosity on the magnitude scale… Absolute Magnitude: The magnitude an object would have if we put it 10 parsecs away from Earth

  45. Absolute Magnitude (M) removes the effect of distanceandputs 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”

  46. 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

  47. Star colour • Star colour is dependent on surface temperature. • Hot stars=Blue or white(about 30,000 K) • Cool stars=Red or Orange(about 3000 K) • The Sun=Orange or Yellow(about 5,500 K)

  48. Wein’s law:

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