Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Astronomy Test Cards
Chapter 10, 11, and 12 Test
115
Astronomy
Undergraduate 1
04/07/2010

Additional Astronomy Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Nuclear Fusion
Definition
-the process by which nuclei merge to form a single nucleus.

--If the right nuclei combine, energy is PRODUCED (E=mc2).
--If the wrong nuclei combine, energy is USED.
Term
What makes a star shiny?
Definition
Nuclear Fusion
Term
Stars are made up of primarily ________ (75%) and some ______ (25%) witha little bit of other elements.
Definition
primarily HYDROGEN, some HELIUM
Term
The nucleus of ________ is a single proton (no neutrons)
Definition
HYDROGEN
Term
Protons have what kind of charge?
Definition
positive
Term
Electrons have a negative charge in exactly the same amount as a ______
Definition
Proton
Term
Opposite charges _______, like charges ______
Definition
ATTRACT, REPEL
Term
Z =
N =
Definition
Z=Proton (Atomic number.
N= Nucleon (proton + Neutron)number

Z tells us which Element it is (hydrogen has Z=1, Helium has Z=2, etc.)
Term
Stable Hydrogen has ___ proton and __ neutrons
Definition
ONE, NO

Denoted as 1H
Term
Stable Hydrogen has ___ proton and __ neutrons
Definition
ONE, NO

Denoted as 1H
Term
Stable Helium has ___ protons and ___ neutrons.
Definition
TWO, TWO

Denoted as 4He
Term
Isotopes have the same number of ________ but different numbers of ________
Definition
PROTONS, NEUTRONS
Term
Most isotopes are stable/unstable.
Definition
UNSTABLE
Term
Describe the Proton-proton chain:
Definition
-4 Hydrogen nucleii combine to produce a Helium-4 nucleus and some energy
-The energy comes about because the Helium nucleus is lighter than the total of the four hydrogen nuclei.
Term
If you can get protons close enough together, the strong force will overcome the _____________ _____
Definition
ELECTROMAGNETIC FORCE
Term
How do you get protons close?
Definition
By making them hot and squshing them with pressure
Term
What stops gravity squashing the Sun down to a point?
Definition
Gravitational Equilibrium
Term
Why doesn't the sun keep shrinking and evetually reach the size of the Earth annd smaller?
Definition
Because the star is producing heat
Term
As gravity pulls gas in, what happens to the gas at the center of the star?
Definition
The gas at the center of the star gets more sqashed (i.e. reaches a higher density)
Term
What happens if Hydrogen nuclei are squshed closer together?
Definition
they fuse easier
Term
More fusion means what?
Definition
hotter gas
Term
What happens as a result of hotter gas wanting to expand in a star?
Definition
The hotter gas wants to push outwards on the rest of the gas
Term
what makes the core less dense?
Definition
gas pushing out
Term
less fusion in a star takes place when...
Definition
gas pushes out, making the core less dense
Term
What terms define the structure of the sun?
Definition
Ball of Plasma
Core
Radiation and Convection Zones
Photosphere
Chromosphere
Corona
Sunspots and Solar Wind
Term
What are three energy transfer mechanisms?
Definition
Conduction, convection, and radiation
Term
What is conduction?
Definition
Heat transter by atom collisions
Term
What is convecttion?
Definition
Heat transfter by mass movement of groups of atoms
Term
What is radiation?
Definition
Heat transfer through electromagnetic radiation
Term
What is an example of conduction in the kitchen?
Definition
you put a frying pan on the stove burner

the burner gets hot and is in contact with the pan

the heat then travels through the metal of the frying pan by atom collisions, heating all of the frying pan
Term
What is an example of convection in the kitchen?
Definition
you heat some water in a saucepan

the water in contact with the metal of the saucepan heats through conduction

hot water is less dense than cold water and so rises. Cold water falls

the hot and cold water mix, spreading the heat between ataoms by mass motion.
Term
What is an example of radiation in the kitchen?
Definition
you turn on a burnter

to test if the burner is hot you place your hand above the burner (not touching it)

your hand gets hot

Your hand is absorbing infra-red radiation being emitted by the burner
Term
where does fusion take place?
Definition
the core
Term
what is the temperature of the core?
Definition
15 Million K
Term
what is the powersource of the Sun and most other stars?
Definition
the core
Term
in the core, hydrogen nuclei form _______ nuclei and release lots of energy.
Definition
helium
Term
Why does the Sun shine?
Definition
Heat in the sun
Term
Heat gets from the core to the surface of the Sun by two of the three heat transfer mmechanisms:
Definition
radiation and convection
Term
Where does the radiation zone occur?
Definition
between the core and one-third of the way to the surface
Term
What is the Temperature of the radiation zone?
Definition
10 million K
Term
how is energy carried from the core?
Definition
by photons/ electromagnetic radiation
Term
The temperature of the radiation zone means there are a lot of _______, a trilion times more intense than visible light.
Definition
X-Rays
Term
What is the Temperature range of the Convecton zone?
Definition
10 Million K at the bottom and 6000 K at the top
Term
The plasma near to the radiation zone _____ and the plasma near the photoshere _____
Definition
RISES, FALLS
Term
What are three methods scientists use to know what is inside the sun?
Definition
Mathematical Models

Sun Quakes

Solar Neutrinos
Term
What are sun quakes cause by?
Definition
the movement of the gas in the Sun causes vibrations
Term
_______ _____ of light from the surface tells us about the vibrations.
Definition
Doppler Shift
Term
Neutrinos
Definition
May have no mass

travel at or near to the speed of light

don't interact well with anything
Term
about how much of the total energy of fusion is carried off by neutrinos?
Definition
2%
Term
What do solar neutrinos do?
Definition
give us a way of probing the core of the sun
Term
plasma is at ______ in a sunspot
Definition
4000 K
Term
Why is there no convection with sunspots?
Definition
Magnetic Fields
Term
what does the closeness of magnetic field lines tell us?
Definition
thhow strong the field is
Term
where do sunspots appear?
Definition
where closely packed magnetic field lines poke through the surface of the sun.
Term
Solar flares occur when...
Definition
magnetic fields through sunspots can undergo rapid change, which produce these thtense storms
Term
What are the Chromoshere and Corona?
Definition
atmosphere around the Sun
Term
What is hotter than the surface of the Sun?
Definition
The surrounding Chromosphere and Corona
Term
The magnetic field carries energy from within the star in which direction?
Definition
upwards
Term
what do solar storms do?
Definition
throw a huge amount of gas into space
Term
What in ejections can affect the Earth's magnetic field?
Definition
Magnetic fields in ejections
Term
What are the causes of sunspot cycles?
Definition
Magnetic poles on the sun seem to flip with the cycles, every 11 years

Sun rotates faster at the equator than at the poles
Term
What is Luminosity and how is it measuered??
Definition
The Amount of power the star emits in all directions. It is measured in units of Watts (W) = Energy/second
Term
What is apparent brightness?
Definition
The brightness that a star appears to have (Usually used as the brighness as viewed from the earth.

Measured in Units of Watts/meter2)
Term
What is the Inverse square law of light?
Definition
relates luminosity and apparent brightness

Brightness= Luminosity/ 4(3.14)(Distance)2
Term
How many light-years is equal to 1 pc (parsec)?
Definition
3.26 light-years
Term
Any star that has a parallax less than __ arcsecond, is further than 1 parsec away.
Definition
1 arcsecond
Term
1 degree = __ arcminutes
1 arcminute = __ arcseconds
Definition
1 degree = 60 arcminutues
1 arcminute = 60 arcseconds
Term
How can we obtain the luminosity of individual stars?
Definition
By combining a distance measurement with apparent brightness
Term
Color is directly related to what?
Definition
TEMPERATURE
Term
What color is the sun, Betelgeuse, and Sirius as related to their temperature?
Definition
Sun- 5800K (White-orange)
Betelgeuse - 3400K (red)
Sirius- 9400K (blue)
Term
What will the temperature of a star affect?
Definition
The absorption spectrum that is seen coming from it.
Term
Stars with ionized element spectra are____ ____

Stars with molecular spectra are _____ ___
Definition
Ionized elemet spectra = Very hot star

Molecular spectra = cool star
Term
What can orbital motions tell?
Definition
The mass of the object being orbited
Term
What is a Binary star system?
Definition
Two stars that orbit eachother
Term
What are visual binaries?
Definition
A pair of stars that can be seen to orbit each other
Term
What are Eclipsing Binaries?
Definition
A pair of stars that orbit each other but cannot be seen as distinct due to the plane of the orbit being edge on.
Term
What is the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram?
Definition
Plot of luminosity vs. spectral type/temperature

all stars sit on this graph
Term
What are the 4 regions on the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram?
Definition
-Main sequence stars
-Giants
-Supergiants
-White Dwarfs
Term
Describe all four regions, main sequence stars, Giants, supergiants, and white dwarfs.
Definition
Main sequence stars: most stars are MS stars, including the sun

GIants: More luminous but cooler than equivalent MS stars

Supergiants: Even more luminous than giants, but roughly the same temperature

White dwarfs: Lower luminosity but higher temperature than the equivalent MS star
Term
Name the main characteristics of Main Sequence Stars
Definition
-Hydrogen Burning
-Core of the star fuses Hydrogen to form Helium
-Direct relationship between luminosity and temperature
---- Hot stars are bright, cool stars are dim.
Term
What determines every property of an MS star? (temperature, size, lifetime, luminosity)
Definition
MASS!
Bigger MS stars are more luminous, hotter, and live a shorter time
Term
What are some of the main characteristics of Giants/ Supergiants?
Definition
-Cooler but more luminous than MS stars. Therefore, they must have a much bigger surface area- which means a bigger radius
Term
What are some of the main characteristics of white dwarfs?
Definition
-Hotter but less luminous than MS stars. Therefore they must have a much smaller surface area-- which means smaller radius
-WD have no fusion at all taking place in their core because all their fuel is gone.
Term
Name the Luminosity class and relative sizes of stars in order from largest to smallest.
Definition
I- Supergiants
II- Bright Giants
III- Giants
IV- Subgiants
V- Main sequence stars
WD- White Dwarfs
Term
What are the 2 properties of star clusters?
Definition
1) all stars lie the same distance from the Earth
2) All stars formed roughly the same time from the same cloud.
Term
What are the two types of star clusters?
Definition
1) open clusters
2) Globular clusters
Term
Which contains more stars, open or globular cluster?
Definition
Globular clusters- contain more than a million stars whereas, open clusters contain only several thousand stars
Term
The Pleaides cluster shows no O stars, what does this mean?
Definition
the cluster is old enough that O stars are already extinct

Clusters are dated by the Sequence Turn- off point
Term
What are the age of stars in open clusters compared to the age of stars in globular cluster?
Definition
Open clusters generally contain young stars, ages of less than 5 billion years

Globular clusters contain stars less massave than the Sun, making them older than 10 billion years.
Term
What do stars need to form?
Definition
COLD, DENSE GAS!
( clouds of this type are called Molecular Clouds)
Term
Cold temperatures mean molecules of __ and __ and particles of dust can form.
Definition
-- H2 and CO can form in cold temperatures
Term
As the cloud collapses, what happens?
Definition
it starts to heat up
(early on, the large cloud radiates most of this new heat away and stays below 100K.)
Term
How is a Protostar formed?
Definition
-As cloud collapses it starts to heat up
-As the density of the gas increases, radiating heat away gets harder.
-The central region of the cloud starts to hea, and the pressure starts to increase
-Heat and pressure start to resist gravity, and slow the collapse- PROTOSTAR IS FORMED
Term
After a protostar is formed, describe the process that takes place next.
Definition
-The gravity of the protostar keeps pulling gas from the surrounding cloud.
-and as it shrinks it starts to spin faster (conservation of anglular momentum)
-spinning causes a disk of gas to form (calle a protoplanetary disk)
- as the star nears fusion, they can throw out jets.
Term
Can fusion take place in a protostar?
Definition
no, protostars are hot, but fusion has not started. The temperature is only 1 million K, 10 Million K is needed to start fusion.
Term
When fusion stars, __________ stops.
Definition
CONTRACTION
Term
What happence as soon as the core stabilizes in a protostar?
Definition
it becomes a Hydrogen- burning Main Sequence Star
Term
What determines the speed of development and lifetime of the protostar?
Definition
STAR MASS
Term
O and B (bright blue) MS stars form faster or slower than M or N (dim red) MS- stars?
Definition
O and B MS stars for FASTER than M or N MS stars
Term
Models suggest stars cannot exceed 100 solar masses, why is this so?
Definition
The gravity of more massive stars is not strong enough to hold on to the outer layers of gas

as the star heats up, these outer layers get blown in to space, decreasing the star mass.
Term
Why can't stars with masses below 0.08 solar masses start fusion?
Definition
Gravity collapses the gas cloud, but heat is never strong enough to resist it, eventually DEGENERACY PRESSURE steps in to stop the collapse
Term
Is degeneracy pressure temperature dependent?
Definition
NO, unlike thermal pressure in most stars, degeneracy pressure is NOT temperature dependent
Term
What is Degeneracy Pressure
Definition
When atoms cannot be squashed down anymore.

In an atom, electrons can only occupy certain orbits.

As you squash electrons together, a similar thing happens

The Pauli Exclusion Principle states that no two electrons can occupy the same state/position
Term
What are the main characteristics of Brown Dwarfs?
Definition
-Mass is less than 0.08 solar masses
-Not quite a star, too big for a planet
-Heat caused by contraction is the only heat
-Slowly cool as degenerate pressure keeps it from collapsing further
-Glows in the infra-red.
Term
What happens after hydrogen starts to run out of low mass stars?
Definition
Low Mass MS star -> Red Giant -> White Dwarf + Nebula
Term
How does a star become a Red Giant?
Definition
Hydrogen in the core begins to run out
-When fusion slows, the heat emitted from the core drops
-Gravity starts to overcome the pressure and the core starts shrinking again.
-When the core collapses it starts to heat
-The helium in the core cannot fuse yet
-But, the hydrogen in the shel around the shrinking core can
-Hydrogen shell burning
-The very hot shell causes hot layers to expand outward
Term
When the core is bigger, what happens to the size of the star?
Definition
gets smaller

when the core shrinks, it makes it get hotter, which makes the shell hotter, allowing hydrogen to burn faster, which makes helium faster, which makes the core more massive... on and on.
Term
What happens when the core reaches 100 million K?
Definition
helium can start to burn
Term
What is Helium Flash?
Definition
-Thermal pressure isnot holding up the core, degenerate pressure is-- degenerate pressure does not depend on temperature.

-So helium burning does not make the core expand. The core jst heats up causing more fusion, which makes it hotter, causing more fusion, etc.. (helium flash)

-Within seconds of helium fusion starting, thermal pressure takes over again.
-The core starts pushing outwards
-The hydrogen shell is pushed out, slowing its reactions.
-The surface of the star starts to shrink.
Term
As helium starts to run low in a star, what happens?
Definition
-The core has become predominantly carbon
-core starts to shrink again
-Rising heat causes burning of a Helium shell around the core, AND a hydrogen shell around the Helium shell.
-Shells and core contract, star surface expands
Term
Describe a low mass star death
Definition
-at the end of fusion, the star is huge
- the gas around the edge of the star is only held weakly by gravity
-this leads to a strong solar wind
-this gas eventually gets blown in to space
-the exposed hot core heats the cloud, ionizing the gas with intense UV radiation
-PLANETARY NEBULAE
Term
What are the 3 kinds of Nebulae?
Definition
Ring, Eskimo, and Hourglass Nebula
Term
What are the main characteristics of white dwarfs?
Definition
-THe hot core that remains is made primarily of carbon
-Degeneracy holds it up against its own gravity
-Core slowly cools, getting dimmer and cooler with time.
Term
Low mass stars don't produce elements heavier than what?
Definition
Carbon
Term
Large mass=
Definition
Stronger Gravity

Stronger gravity requires that the core be hotter to produce the balancing thermal pressure

hotter cores allow protons in Hydrogen to get close to larger nuclei, like Carbon, Oxygen, and Nitrogen

The CNO Cycle
Supporting users have an ad free experience!