BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

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BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Transcript of BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Page 1: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

BINARY STARS

How they help us to determine

the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Page 2: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

How do they form?

Page 3: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Mizar A and B are visual binaries.

Page 4: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

The very bright star, Sirius, is actually a visual binary, too.

• Sirius is the main star in the constellation Canis Major, so it is called Alpha Canis Majoris.

• It is actually a blue-white giant (A) with a white dwarf companion (B).

• The elliptical orbit has been well-plotted out.

ORION

SIRIUS

Page 5: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

The orbit of Sirius B:

Page 6: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Revolution around the center of mass

• In reality both objects revolve around a common point, known as the center of mass.

• The center of mass is closer to the more massive object and farther from the less massive one.

Page 7: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Binary star orbits are usually double ellipses:

• The center of mass (•) is close to the massive blue star. It revolves around in a small elliptical orbit.

• The less massive yellowyellow star revolves in a much larger orbit.

• Notice the pattern of a binary system in motion. Visual Binary Animation

Page 8: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

20 = 4

5 1

4:1 ratio in mass

Ratio of the masses

Star AStar B

5 AU 20 AU

DB = MA

DA MB

Page 9: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Kepler’s Law….Modified

• In the Solar System, we ignore the mass of the sun and the planets (since M1 = 1 and M2 is very small).

• With binary stars, the masses must be taken in account.

• If we know D and P, we can determine the masses of both stars.

Page 10: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Finding the masses of binary stars with Kepler’s Law

M1 + M2 = D3

P2

MA + MB = 103

52

MA + MB =

1000 ÷25 = 40 suns

Star A

Star B

D = 10 AU

P = 5 yrs

MA = 32 suns

MB = 8 suns

Page 11: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Eclipsing Binary Stars

The stars have different luminosities, and they eclipse each other as they revolve around the center of mass.

Page 12: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

The stars are too close to be seen separately.

• When an eclipse occurs, you can tell which star is brighter.

• The flat bottoms (2,4) indicate that one star is smaller than the other.

• When the cycle repeats, you can tell the period of revolution.

Eclipsing Binary Animation

Page 13: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Spectroscopic Binaries

• We can’t see their orbits or see eclipses, but we can observe Doppler shifts in the spectrum.

• These shifts occur when stars move toward us (blue shift) or away from us

(red shift).

Page 14: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Revolving Stars cause Doppler shifts only when moving away or toward the observer. The larger the shift the higher the velocity.

Spectroscopic Binary Animation

Page 15: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

How does this help us with non-binary stars?

It can help to determine their masses, luminosities, and their distances from Earth.

K3 star

Page 16: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Find luminosity from the H-R Diagram

The K5 (orange star) has a luminosity of 0.1 (10-1) suns.

Page 17: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Mass-Luminosity Graph

• Since the luminosity of this K5 star is 10-1 (0.1) its mass is around 0.6 sun.

• This is a red-orange dwarf (on the main sequence).

• This method works only for main sequence stars.

Page 18: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Distance is found from the difference between the apparent and the absolute magnitudes by the formula:

D = 10(Mapp - Mabs + 5)/5

D = 10(2 - 7 + 5)/5 = 100 =

1 parsec

L = 0.1

Mabs = 7

Mapp = 3

Page 19: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Try this yourself!

You find an A0 star. Use the H-R diagram to find its luminosity.

Then find its mass from this graph.

Page 20: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Now find the distance…

What is its absolute magnitude?

Suppose we see this star as a

fifth magnitude star.

Substitute into this formula:

D = 10(Mapp - Mabs + 5)/5

Page 21: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

Hate Math? Try this method…

• Determine the difference between the apparent and absolute magnitude of this A0 star.

• Then read the result off of this graph.

Page 22: BINARY STARS How they help us to determine the mass of stars and the size of our galaxy.

CONCLUSIONS!• From the study of binary stars we can

determine the masses of stars.• If we know the mass of a main-sequence star,

we can determine its luminosity from a graph or by formula.

• The H-R diagram can be used to find absolute magnitude, temperature, and spectral class.

• We can estimate the distance of the star from the magnitude difference graph, or by using the second formula.