DiscoverAstronomy 162 - Stars, Galaxies, & the Universe
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Astronomy 162 - Stars, Galaxies, & the Universe
Author: Richard Pogge
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© 2006-2021 Richard W. Pogge
Description
Astronomy 162, Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe, is part 2 of a
2-quarter introductory Astronomy for non-science majors taught at The
Ohio State University. This podcast presents lecture audio from
Professor Richard Pogge's Winter Quarter 2006 class. All of the
lectures were recorded live in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the OSU Main
Campus in Columbus, Ohio.
2-quarter introductory Astronomy for non-science majors taught at The
Ohio State University. This podcast presents lecture audio from
Professor Richard Pogge's Winter Quarter 2006 class. All of the
lectures were recorded live in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the OSU Main
Campus in Columbus, Ohio.
43 Episodes
Reverse
How do we measure the distances to the stars? This lecture
introduces the method of trigonometric parallaxes and the
units of the Parsec and Light Year. Recorded 2006 January 9
in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus of The
Ohio State University.
The "fixed stars" are really in constant motion, but these motions
are too small to see with the human eye in a human lifetime. This
lecture introduces proper motions (apparent angular motion of the
stars in the sky), radial velocities (motion towards or away from
us measured using the Doppler Shift of the star's spectral lines),
and true space velocities, measured by combining three key observables:
the proper motion, radial velocity, and distance to the star. Recorded
2006 January 10 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus of
The Ohio State University.
How do we quantify stellar brightness? This lecture introduces
the inverse square-law of apparent brightness, the relation between
Luminosity and Apparent Brightness, introduces the stellar magnitude
system, and discusses photometry and the how we measure apparent
brightness in practice. Recorded
2006 January 11 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus of
The Ohio State University.
How do we measure the masses and radii of stars? This lecture
describes the three basic types of binary stars, and how each are
used to measure the masses of stars. Details of how to measure
stellar radii are beyond the scope of this class, but we briefly
describe the direct measurements of stellar radii.
Recorded 2006 January 12 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What do the spectra of stars look like, and what can they tell us
about stellar properties? This lecture introduces the idea of stellar
color, gives a brief overview of the history of stellar spectroscopy,
and introduces spectral classification and the main stellar spectral
types OBAFGKMLT.
Recorded 2006 January 13 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
How are all of the observed properties of stars (Luminosity,
Mass, Radius, Temperature and Spectral Type) related to one another?
This lecture introduces the Herzsprung-Russell Diagram, a plot of
Luminosity versus Temperature for stars that is our most powerful tool
for unlocking the secrets of the stars.
Recorded 2006 January 17 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What are the physical laws that determine the internal structure
of stars? We first introduce the Mass-Luminosity Relation for
Main Sequence stars, as well as seeing how the mean density of stars
differs for stars on different parts of the H-R diagram. We then
introduce the Ideal Gas Law, which relates pressure, density, and temperature,
and show how the internal structure of a star is determined by
a continuous tug-of-war between internal pressure trying to blow
the star apart, and self-gravity trying to make it collapse. The
balance between the two is the state of Hydrostatic Equilibrium. How
the balance is maintained, and what happens when it is tipped in
favor of either will determine the appearance and subsequent evolution
of the star. Recorded 2006 January 18 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the
Columbus campus of The Ohio State University.
How long can the Sun continue to shine, and what source of energy
does it tap to keep shining? This lecture answers this question by
introducing two important energy sources for stars: Gravitational
Contraction otherwise known as the Kelvin-Helmholz Mechanism, and
Nuclear Fusion. We will show that fusion of 4 Hydrogen nuclei into
a Helium nucleus via the proton-proton chain liberates enough energy
to provide for the Sun's Luminosity needs for about 10 Billion Years.
Recorded 2006 January 19 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University. Note: the recording mistakenly says
January 18th. Oops.
How do stars generate energy in their cores, and once made, how is
that energy transported to the surface where it can be radiated away
as Luminosity? This lecture revisits nuclear fusion and the Kelvin-Helmholz
Mechanism, and discusses the 3 ways energy can be transported in stars:
Radiation, Convection, and Conduction. This will lead us to the
concept of Thermal Equilibrium in stars, which is the last main piece
of stellar physics we need before we can address the question of how
stars are formed and evolve in the rest of this Unit.
Recorded 2006 January 23 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
How do stars form? The Sun is old and in Hydrostatic and
Thermal equilibrium. How did it get that way? This lecture
presents the basic steps of star formation as a progress from
cold interstellar Giant Molecular Clouds to Protostars in
Hydrostatic Equilibrium, and then Pre-Main Sequence evolution
which ends in ignition of core Hydrogen fusion and establishing
Thermal Equilibrium on the Zero-Age Main Sequence.
Recorded 2006 January 24 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What are the properties of stars on the Main Sequence? This lecture
discusses what happens to a star after it alights onto the Main
Sequence, burning H to He in its core, and maintaining a state
of Hydrostatic and Thermal Equilibrium. We will see how the mass
of a star determines its location along the Main Sequence and
influences its energy generation and internal structure. We finally
introduce the nuclear timescale and derive the Main-Sequence Lifetime
for stars, and discuss its consequences.
Recorded 2006 January 25 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What happens to a low-mass star (less than 4 solar masses) when
it runs out of core Hydrogen and must leave the Main Sequence.
This lecture describes the changes inside a low-mass star after
Hydrogen exhaustion through the Red Giant, Horizontal Branch,
Asymtotic Giant, and Planetary Nebula phases. In the end, we will
see the star's envelope and core go their separate ways, the
envelope gently puffed off into space, briefly flowering as a
Planetary Nebula, and the Carbon-Oxygen core collapsing into
a White Dwarf.
Recorded 2006 January 26 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What happens when a high-mass (more than 4 solar masses) Main Sequence
stars runs out of Hydrogen in its core. At first the internal evolution
looks like that of a low-mass star, but now we get first a Red Supergiant
then a sucession of blue and red supergiant phases as different nuclear
fuels are tapped by the star for its energy. This lecture describes
the evolution of high-mass stars from the Main Sequence until their
eventual ends.
Recorded 2006 January 27 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
Once a massive star builds a massive Iron/Nickel core at the end of
the Silicon Burning day, it is doomed. A catastrophic core collapse
is followed by explosive ejection of the envelope in a Supernova.
This lecture describes the stages of a core-bounce supernova explosion,
and the subsequent seeding of the interstellar medium with heavy
metals by the explosion debris. The fate of the collapsing core is
the subject of the next lecture in this series.
Recorded 2006 January 30 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What happens to the cores left behind at the end of a star's life?
This lecture introduces these stellar remnants: White Dwarfs
(remnants of low-mass stars held up by Electron Degeneracy Pressure),
and Neutron Stars (remnant cores of core-bounce supernovae held up
by Neutron Degeneracy Pressure). We also the Chandrasekhar Mass for
White Dwarfs, Type Ia Supernovae resulting from a white dwarf getting
tipped over the Chandrasekhar Mass, Pulsars (rapidly rotating magnetized
neutrons stars), and ask what happens when a neutron star gets tipped
over its mass limit.
Recorded 2006 January 31 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What happens if even Neutron Degeneracy pressure is insufficient to
halt the collapse of gravity? In that case, the object simply collapses
in upon itself, approaching a state of infinite density. Such an object
has such strong gravity that nothing, not even light can escape from it.
We call these Black Holes. This lecture describes the basic properties
of black holes, takes an imaginary journey through the event horizon,
and discusses observational evidence that stellar-mass black holes
(the remnants of the evolution of very massive stars) actually exist,
and ends with the suggestion that if Steven Hawking and others
are right, black holes may not be so black after all. One Erratum:
during the lecture while commenting on the fate of Karl Schwarzschild,
for whom the Schwarzschild Radius is named, I incorrectly identify Henry
Moseley (killed by a sniper during the Galipoli Campaign of WWI) as one of
the discoverers of the neutron. Moseley was the person who discovered that
"atomic number" corresponded to nuclear charge, and hence the number of
protons in the nucleus. The discoverer of the neutron was James Chadwick,
who died in 1974.
Recorded 2006 February 1 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
What are our observational tests of Stellar Evolution? This lecture
discusses how we use Hertzsprung-Russell Diagrams of star clusters
to test stellar evolution theory, and some of the conclusions we have
drawn. In particular, we will see how the age of a star cluster can
be estimated from the Main-Sequence Turn-Off for the cluster. We
also introduce Open and Globular Clusters, and show how we apply
stellar evolution theory to their H-R diagrams.
Recorded 2006 February 2 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
How do we measure distances to astronomical objects that are too far
away to use Trigonometric Parallaxes? This first lecture of Unit 4
reviews geometric methods like trigonometric parallaxes, and then
introduces the idea of Standard Candles, and how they are used to
develop methods for deriving Luminosity Distances based on the Inverse
Square Law of Brightness. We will explore three luminosity-based
distance methods useful for studying our Galaxy and nearby galaxies:
Spectroscopic Parallaxes, Cepheid Variable Period-Luminosity Relation,
and the RR Lyrae P-L Relation. Recorded 2006 February 6 in 1008 Evans
Laboratory on the Columbus campus of The Ohio State University.
What is the Milky Way, and what is our place within it? This lecture
introduces the Milky Way, the bright band of light that crosses the
sky, and describes how we came to our present understanding of the size
and shape of the Milky Way Galaxy, and our location in it.
Recorded 2006 February 7 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
How did we come to understand that the Milky Way was just one of
billions of other galaxies in a vast Universe? This lecture
reviews the history of how we came to recognize that the spiral nebulae
were, in fact, other milky ways like our own: vast systems of
100s of billions of stars located millions of parsecs away. The
key to understanding their nature was finding the distances to the
spiral nebulae compared to the size of our Galaxy.
Recorded 2006 February 8 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
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this is so freaking kool. these are the questions we had as kids . she makes it so easy to understand. my whole family of 6 sat and listened.