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Stars are among the
best-understood celestial objects. If
the light of a star is dispersed into
its spectrum, the relative intensities
at various wavelengths yield
considerable information about the
star. The surface temperature can be
estimated, using the laws of thermal
radiation.
If the distance of the star is known,
its luminosity can be found by summing
the observed intensities over all
wavelengths. Its radius can then be
found using the fact that the
luminosity is the product of the
energy emitted per unit area (which
depends only on the surface
temperature) and the total surface
area.
If the spectrum of a star is studied
under high resolution, many dark lines
are seen at specific wavelengths.
These lines are due to the absorption
of light from deeper layers by atoms
in the cooler layers above. The kinds
of atoms present in the star can then
be identified by comparing stellar
absorption lines with those produced
in the laboratory by known gases, and
the temperature and pressure of the
atmosphere as well as the relative
abundances of the chemical elements
can be calculated.
Most stars belong to a "main
sequence" (see
diagram below) in which
both temperature and luminosity
increase with mass. Some stars are
much brighter and hence much larger
than main-sequence stars of the same
temperature, and are called red
giants. Many stars are much fainter
and hence much smaller than
main-sequence stars of the same
temperature, including white dwarfs (1
per cent of the size of the Sun) and
neutron stars (0.001 per cent of the
size of the Sun).
Theoretical models of stellar
interiors have been calculated based
on the theory that an equilibrium
exists between the force of gravity,
which tends to cause the star to
collapse, and the pressure of
superheated gases, which tend to
expand. High stellar temperatures also
drive a flow of heat from inside the
star to the outside. If the star is to
be in equilibrium, this heat loss must
be compensated by the energy released
by nuclear reactions in the core. As
various nuclear fuels are exhausted,
the star slowly evolves, and the core
contracts to higher and higher
densities.
For stars of low mass, this process
ends when the outer layers are gently
ejected to form a planetary nebula;
the core then cools down to form a
white dwarf. More massive stars become
unstable; as they evolve, this core
suddenly collapses to form a neutron
star or black hole, and the energy
thereby released ejects the outer
layers at very high speed, in a
colossal explosion called a supernova.
Hertzsprung-Russell
Diagram
The position in the
H-R diagram of the point representing
a star corresponds to its brightness
and temperature. Stars on the left of
the diagram are blue because they are
hot, while those on the right are red
because they are cool. The diagonal
band of stars running from the upper
left to the lower right is called the
main sequence. Stars in the upper
right are called red giants: although
they are cool and red, they are very
bright, because they are big. Stars
near the bottom (known as white
dwarfs) are very hot, but not very
bright, because they are small. This
diagram was developed independently by
Ejnar Hertzsprung, a Dane, and Henry
Norris Russell, an American.

All
stars are hot, gaseous bodies like the
Sun, but differ from it and from one
another in minor ways. The most
important physical data about a star are
its intrinsic brightness, size, mass,
and chemical composition. Although all
stars seem much fainter than the Sun
because of their great distances from
the Earth, some of them are
intrinsically brighter than the Sun.
Star masses can be determined directly
for the Sun and for pairs of stars, in
binary systems, that are seen to orbit
around each other. Astronomers apply the
law of gravitation and Kepler’s laws
to determine the stellar masses
mathematically. Of the 50 nearest stars
for which information is fairly
complete, 10 per cent are brighter,
larger, and more massive than the Sun.
Spectroscopic studies show that the
stars are composed largely of hydrogen.
Deep Sky
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Sky - astronomy links and
pictures of galaxies and nebula.
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Sky Pages - amateur astronomers'
deep sky information, observations,
pictures and links to resources for
the amateur astronomer, especially
deep-sky observers.
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Cluster Page, The - dynamics,
Messier catalogue, observations and
more.
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Deep-Sky Astronomy Pages -
drawings and observation-reports of
all kind of deep-sky objects,
observed with a 6 inch
Newton-telescope. |
 | Your
Sky - One of many educational
pages devised by entrepreneur and
programmer John Walker, Your Sky is
a virtual planetarium. Visitors to
the site can use the Sky Map to
produce astronomical maps by
entering time and
date, viewpoint, and observing
location (latitude/longitude and
ascension/declination). The Virtual
Telescope helps you to track comets
and asteroids, and Horizon Views
returns views of the stars above the
horizon as seen from a specified
observing site at a given date and
time. If you aren't sure of the
exact map coordinates of the city
sky you desire to view, you can
consult a hypertext list of major
cities around the world. Want to aim
your telescope at a certain planet
or stellar body? There's a hypertext
list of those,
too. Full explanations of map
colours and symbols are provided,
along with links to related
programs, a Sky screensaver, and
more. |
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Stars
are large celestial bodies composed of
gravitationally contained hot gases
emitting electromagnetic radiation,
especially light, as a result of nuclear
reactions inside the stars. The sun is a
star. With the sole exception of the
sun, the stars appear to be fixed,
maintaining the same pattern in the
skies year after year. In fact the stars
are in rapid motion, but their distances
are so great that their relative changes
in position become apparent only over
the centuries.
The
number of stars visible to the naked eye
from earth has been estimated to total
8,000, of which 4,000 are in the
northern hemisphere of the sky and 4,000
in the southern hemisphere. At any one
time during the night in either
hemisphere, only about 2,000 stars are
visible. The others are obscured by
atmospheric haze, especially near the
horizon, and by faint sky light.
Astronomers have calculated that the
stars in the Milky Way, the galaxy to
which the sun belongs, number in the
hundreds of billions. The Milky Way, in
turn, is only one of several hundred
million such galaxies visible through
large modern telescopes. The individual
stars visible in the sky are simply
those that lie closest to the solar
system in the Milky Way.
The
star nearest to our solar system is
Proxima Centauri, one component of the
triple star Alpha Centauri, which is
about 40 trillion km (25 trillion mi)
from the earth. In terms of the speed of
light, the common standard used by
astronomers for expressing distance,
this triple-star system is about 4.29
light-years distant; light travelling at
about 300,000 km/s (186,000 mi/s) takes
more than four years and three months to
travel from this star to the earth.


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