1 / 16

ASTR_2011 Introduction to Observational Astronomy

ASTR_2011 Introduction to Observational Astronomy. Day-5. Announcements. 1 st Quarter Observing Night Next Thursday – Oct. 10 Start time will be 7:30pm Start set-up at ~6:30pm in Atrium. Magnitude.

jeroen
Download Presentation

ASTR_2011 Introduction to Observational Astronomy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ASTR_2011Introduction to Observational Astronomy Day-5

  2. Announcements • 1st Quarter Observing Night • Next Thursday – Oct. 10 Start time will be 7:30pm Start set-up at ~6:30pm in Atrium

  3. Magnitude Originally devised by Hipparchus around 140 BC. Based on when stars become visible after sunset. Sunset to astronomical twilight (complete dark) is divided into six equal time periods 1stmag…visible in first 2ndmag…visible in second 3rdmag…visible in third 4thmag…visible in fourth 5thmag…visible in fifth 6thmag…visible in sixth

  4. Modern definition of magnitude is based on light flux Note that this compares two stars. If a “zero point” is defined then where C is the zero point offset

  5. Zero Points N.R. Pogson, originator of the modern magnitude definition, proposed an average of the sixth magnitude stars in certain star catalogues . Result: mSirius = -1.6 North Polar Sequence…system of “standard stars” with known magnitudes to compare against mVega≡ 0.0 but problems with variability and dust leads modern values to mVega = 0.03 Most common systems now are standard star systems

  6. Absolute magnitude Defined as the magnitude of the object if it was located at a distance of 10 parsecs. This gives a distance (d) relationship between apparent magnitude (m) and absolute magnitude (M). Distance is measured in parsecs

  7. Types of Magnitude • Visual Magnitude (mv)…measured over the visible spectrum • Monochromatic magnitude(ml)…measured over a narrow wavelength range • Bolometric magnitude (mbol)…measured over the entire E/M spectrum • Photographic magnitude (mpg)…magnitude measured with photographic plate

  8. Filter Systems Early 20th Century “filter” system was photographic (mpg) and visual (mv) 1950’s H. L. Johnson & W. W. Morgan added an ultraviolet (mU) and converted photographic to “blue” (mB) for the UBV system Alan Cousins work with GaAs photomultipliers which are sensitive in red and IR adds R and I for Johnson-Cousins UBVRI system J. A. Smith et al use mostly non-overlapping filter system for SDSS…UGRIZ

  9. Johnson-Cousins Filter System

  10. SDSS Filter System

  11. Comparison of UBVRI and UGRIZ

  12. Flux Amount of light energy per unit area per unit time in a specific wavelength band Recall that

  13. Blackbody Spectra

  14. Two laws govern blackbody radiation Wein’s Displacement Law Where T is in Kelvin and l is in meters Planck’s Law with B in Watts per square meter per Hz per steradians or Watts per square meter per meter per steradians, T in Kelvin, c in meters per second and l is in meters. h is Planck’s constant and k is Boltzmann’s constant

  15. Stellar Classification Annie Jump Cannon developed a stellar classification system based on temperature and the women of Harvard Observatory classified hundreds of thousands of stars. The project spanned several decades and was funded by a grant from the widow of Henry Draper. The resulting catalogue is the Henry Draper Catalogue

  16. Stellar Classification Scheme

More Related