Garrelt Mellema
Stockholm Observatory
April/May 2000
1. Apparent and absolute magnitudes
Show from the definition of magnitudes that the difference between two
apparent magnitudes is equal to the difference between the two
corresponding absolute magnitudes:
and thus
independent of distance.
2. Wien's displacement law
The wavelength at which a blackbody spectrum peaks is given by
Wien's displacement law:
Also find the effective temperatures at which black body spectra peak for the centres of the photometry filters U (365 nm), B (440 nm), V (550 nm), R (700 nm), I (900 nm), and K (2200 nm). (The R, I and K filters are a continuation of the UBV system to infrared wavelengths). Which of the filters are best for detecting the 5 spectral types above?
3. Blackbodies
When fitting observations of some stars one finds that one needs two black body curves in order to make a good fit. An example is shown in the figure below. The dotted lines are the fits and the points and solid lines are the observations. Find the effective temperatures for the two curves using the wavelength at which they peak. What might be going on here? (hint: stars cannot be cooler than about 2,000 K; notice that in the observations the blue part of higher temperature black body lies below the fit, i.e. some of this radiation is `missing').
4. The linear stellar model
Derive the linear stellar model for a star of mass and radius
by assuming that the density varies with radius as
5. Molecular weights
Find the mean molecular weight for the case of fully ionized
pure hydrogen:
,
. Explain why it has this value. Do the
same for fully ionized pure helium (
,
) and solar
abundances (
,
,
).
6. Mean molecular weight per electron
Apart from the usual mean molecular weight , one often also
defines a mean molecular weight per electron
, so that
7. Effect of composition differences
In the later faces of stellar evolution the stellar core may have a different chemical composition than the stellar envelope. Assume that the transition from the core to the envelope is sharp. In equilibrium the pressure and temperature need to be constant across this surface. Show that a density jump must be the result. If the core is pure He and the envelope pure H, by which fraction must the density change?
8. Degeneracy
Use the definition of the Fermi energy to derive the approximate
density at which electron degeneracy becomes important for
temperatures of K (hint: take
).
Neutrons are also fermions with spin 1/2, but with a mass of
kg. At approximately which density do the
neutrons become degenerate?
9. Degeneracy pressure
A numerical expression for the degeneracy pressure of non-relativistic
electrons is
Estimate the density (expressed as
) at which the
degeneracy pressure
of the non-relativistic
electrons becomes larger than their contribution to the gas pressure
. What is the value for for
in the centre of the Sun where
K,
g cm
,
and
?
10. Dynamic time scales
a. Put the pressure term in the equation of motion (Eq. 10.6) at the surface of the star to zero and estimate the dynamical time scale (also called the hydrostatic time scale) from the equation of motion. What is the value for the Sun?
b. The balance between the gravitational force and the pressure
gradient in a star is very delicate. This can be seen by considering
the case of a small deviation from hydrostatic equilibrium near the
surface of the Sun, say by a factor of 0.01%, so
c. Consider the case of a pressure-less sphere of radius
collapsing under its own weight
. Solve the equation of motion to
find the time scale for complete collapse (the so called free fall
time
).
Hint: multiply the equation of motion by
and
integrate once. Integrate once more (over radius) to find the time
scale. The integral can be solved by substituting
.
What is the expression for if the sphere has a constant
density
?
11. Gravitational time scales
a. For a star with total mass , radius
and a mass distribution
, write down the gravitational potential at a radius
. The
total gravitational energy
can be found by integrating
over the entire star. Do this for the case of a star of constant
density
and for the case of a star with a linear density law:
b. Assuming that the Sun produces its luminosity by releasing
gravitational energy, estimate its yearly change in size. The
precision with which we can currently measure the solar radius is
about
. How long would it take before we could
notice a change in size?
Up to the beginning of this century is was believed that the Sun produces its energy by gravitational collapse, leading to a discrepancy between geological and biological times and the solar evolution time.
12. Major nuclear burnings
The full expression for the energy production rate per unit
of mass (in W/kg) for the pp-cycle, CNO-cycle and processes
are given by
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(1) | |
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(3) |
13. Radiation pressure
Using the results for the central pressure and temperature from the linear model (problem 4), estimate for which stellar parameters radiation pressure becomes more important than gas pressure in the core.
14. Kramer's opacities
Explain why in the Kramer's opacities the free-free opacity is
proportional to , the bound-free to
, and the
electron scattering to
(Consider which type of particles play
a role in these sources of opacity).
15. Eddington limit
Show that in the case of heat transfer by radiative diffusion the temperature gradient implies a gradient in the radiation pressure. This gradient equals the radiant heat flow.
Bearing in mind that a pressure gradient corresponds to a force on the
gas, find the radiant heat flow which by radiation pressure alone can
support the atmosphere of a star with surface gravity . From
this show that there is a maximum luminosity for a star of mass
above which radiation pressure will push away the atmosphere:
Obtain a numerical
estimate for by assuming that the surface is hot enough
for electron scattering to be the dominating source of
opacity. Express
in solar masses (
kg).This
maximum luminosity is called the Eddington limit.
16. Polytropic models
Using the expression from the notes on polytropic models show that
for a polytropic model of order
Also show that for a star whose pressure is dominated by extremely relativistic electrons there is only one possible solution for the mass.
Use the full equation of state for relativistic electrons and the equations for a polytrope to derive an expression for this solution.