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Luminosity of Star

Luminosity of Star

Assessment

Presentation

Science

7th - 9th Grade

Hard

Created by

Joseph Anderson

FREE Resource

9 Slides • 8 Questions

1

The Life Cycle of Stars

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2

Stars and the HR Diagram

  • The HR Diagram is a graph that compares the surface temperature of a star with its magnitude or how bright the would be if they were all the same distance from Earth.

  • Luminosity is a term that measures how much energy leaves a star in a certain period of time.

  • General Rule: As luminosity increases, brightness increases.

3

What do the axes on this chart show us about stars?

Temperature

Luminosity

Spectral Class

Magnitude

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4

What affects luminosity?

  • Temperature: As temperature increases, luminosity increases.

  • Size: As size increases, luminosity increases.

  • Most Luminous? Large and Hot

  • Least Luminous? Small and Cool

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5

Multiple Choice

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What is the approximate surface temeprature of the sun according to the HR diagram?

1

5,500 K

2

6,000K

3

7,200 K

4

15,000K

6

Multiple Choice

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Would the surface temperature of a red supergiant be higher or lower than a white dwarf?

1

Higher

2

Lower

7

Poll

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What is the color of the stars with the highest surface temperature?

Red

Yellow

White

Blue

8

Multiple Choice

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Most of the stars on the HR diagram are classified as which type of star?

1

White Dwarfs

2

Main Sequence

3

Giants

4

Supergiants

9

Multiple Choice

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How is it possible for white dwarf stars to have a lower luminosity than the sun, even though the sun has a cooler surface temperature.

1

The sun is smaller than a white dwarf.

2

The sun is larger than a white dwarf.

10

Multiple Choice

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Star A has a surface temperature of 10,000K and medium brightness. What color is it?

1

White

2

Red

3

Yellow

4

Blue

11

Multiple Choice

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What kind of star is Sirius, the Dog Star?

1

Main Sequence

2

White Dwarf

3

Blue Giant

4

Red Supergiant

12

The Life Cycle of a Star

  • All stars begin life as dust in a nebula.

  • Gravity begins to form masses of hydrogen in the nebula.

  • When the heat in the protostar reaches 15,000,000 C, nuclear fusion starts and a star is born!

13

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This is the Pillars of Creation within the Eagle Nebula, part of M16, viewed by the Hubble Telescope

14

2 Pathways:

The mass of the star that forms in the nebula determines how the star will burn fuel:

--small stars burn their fuel more slowly and reach lower temperatures.

--large stars burn through their fuel rapidly and reach higher temperatures.

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15

Common Ground:

All Stars begin life as a H -> He fusing Main Sequence star.


No matter the mass of a star, as its hydrogen supply begins to run low, the core cools and the star takes on a red color, forming either a Red Supergiant or a Red Giant.

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16

Different Endings:

Large stars can end up as black holes or pulsars.


Small stars can end up as a Nova, Supernova or a Black Dwarf.

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17

Multiple Choice

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If all Main Sequence stars are "young" stars, what can the color tell you about the star?

1

Its size

2

how long it will stay part of the Main Sequence

3

Both options are correct

4

Neither option is correct

The Life Cycle of Stars

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