Astronomy: Stars (part 2) – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
A nuclear reaction in which atomic nuclei of low atomic number fuse to form a heavier nucleus with the release of energy
answer
nuclear fusion
question
(physical chemistry) a fourth state of matter distinct from solid or liquid or gas and present in stars and fusion reactors. A gas-like state of matter consisting of a mixture of free electrons and atoms that are stripped of their electrons. The Sun is made of this stuff yo
answer
plasma
question
The outer layer of the sun's atmosphere.
answer
corona
question
A gaseous layer of the sun's atmosphere (extending from the photosphere to the corona) that is visible during a total eclipse of the sun
answer
chromosphere
question
The inner layer of the sun's atmosphere that gives off its visible light
answer
photosphere
question
The outer most layer of the sun's interior: hot gases rise and eventually cool as they approach the top.
answer
convection zone
question
A region of very tightly packed gas in the sun's interior where energy is transferred mainly in the form of light.
answer
radiation zone
question
An elementary particle that has little rest mass and no charge but carries energy from a nuclear reaction.
answer
neutrino
question
Almost no light emerges from below the photosphere, so you can't see into the solar interior. However, solar astronomers using a technique called ____ can analyze naturally occurring vibrations in the sun constantly produce vibrations- rumbles that would be much too low to hear with human ears even if your ears could survive a visit to the sun's atmosphere. They are generally very, very low pitch sounds.
answer
helioseismology
question
a system for describing stellar brightness by using numbers, called magnitudes, based on an ancient Greek way of describing the brightness of stars in the sky. This system uses apparent magnitude to describe a star's apparent brightness and absolute magnitude to describe a star's luminosity. 1 being the brightest.
answer
magnitude system
question
O type stars have the _________ surface temperature
answer
highest
question
Mmemonic for remembering the OBAFGKM spectral type sequence
answer
Oh Be A Fine Girl, Kiss Me
question
Early twentieth century astronomer who catalouged the spectra of over 225,000 stars. Her most significant contribution to society was carefully categorized spectra of light emmitted from stars, allowing others who followed to build off her work
answer
Annie Jump Cannon
question
Two stars orbiting their common center of gravity.
answer
binary star system
question
A pair of stars we can see with a telescope as they orbit each other
answer
visual binary
question
A graph of brightness versus time commonly used in analyzing variable stars and eclipsing binaries.
answer
light curve
question
when stars run out of hydrogen in their centers they may also start to undergo fusion of the helium. Process takes three Helium nuclei and combines them into a carbon nucleus, releasing energy into the core (triple-alpha process)
answer
helium fusion
question
For these larger stars, C is found in the star's spectrum as absorption lines. These stars are known as ______ _____. Strong convection drudges up carbon from the core during a star's last gasps.
answer
carbon stars
question
Fusion reactions that fuse a helium nucleus into some other nucleus; such reactions can fuse carbon into oxygen, oxygen into neon, neon into magnesium, and so on.
answer
helium-capture reactions
question
Ordered list of the shells a dying star can attain during fusion of heavier nuclei
answer
iron (inert), silicon, magnesium, neon, oxygen, carbon, helium, hydrogen
question
origin of the heavy elements
answer
dying stars
question
core-collapse of a high-mass star, elements heavier than iron generated very rapidly in explosion
answer
supernovae
question
A celestial object of very small radius (typically 18 miles/30 km) and very high density, composed predominantly of closely packed neutrons. Such objects are thought to form by the gravitational collapse of the remnant of a massive star after a supernova explosion, provided that the star is insufficiently massive to produce a black hole.
answer
neutron star
question
A small very dense star that is typically the size of a planet. Such an object is formed when a low-mass star has exhausted all its central nuclear fuel and lost its outer layers as a planetary nebula. Maintained by electron degeneracy pressure.
answer
white dwarf
question
The limit to the mass of a white dwarf star, above which it cannot be supported by electron degeneracy and cannot exist as a white dwarf.
answer
Chandrasekhar limit
question
What is the Chandrasekhar limit?
answer
1.4 solar masses
question
A white dwarf can have an accretion disk if it formed in a _____ _______ __________
answer
close binary system
question
Occurs when the energy produced ejects much of the white dwarf accretion disc into space.
answer
novae
question
Occurs when an accreting white dwarf reaches the white dwarf limit, ignites runaway carbon fusion and explodes like a bomb. A(n) ____________ can occur only in a binary system, and all such events are thought to have the same luminosity. Often called a type Ia supernovae.
answer
white dwarf supernovae
question
Iron core of massive star collapses and explodes- leaving behind either a neutron star or a black hole. NOT the same as a white dwarf supernovae.
answer
massive star supernovae
question
The features which distinguish a white dwarf supernovae from massive star supernovae
answer
fades quicker, lack hydrogen lines, (all white dwarf supernovaes have) identical light curves
question
A celestial object, thought to be a rapidly rotating neutron star, that emits regular pulses of radio waves and other electromagnetic radiation at rates of up to one thousand pulses per second.
answer
pulsar
question
a binary star system in which one of the stars, or the gas associated with a star, emits x rays intensely. Thought to be close binaries with accreting neutron stars.
answer
X-ray binaries
question
An object that produces occasional X-ray flares. Thought to be caused by mass transfer in a closed binary system
answer
X-ray bursters
question
The location around a black hole where the escape velovity equals the speed of light; the boundary of a black hole
answer
event horizon
question
An object in space whose gravity is so strong not even light can escape.
answer
black hole
question
The distance from the center of an object such that, if all the mass were compressed within that region, the escape speed would equal the speed of light
answer
Schwarzschild radius
question
A point in which matter is infinitely dense, as in the center of a black hole or the universe at the very beginning.
answer
singularity
question
neutron star limit
answer
3 solar masses
question
Gamma rays associated with extremely energetic explosions that have been observed in distant galaxies. They are the brightest electromagnetic events known to occur in the universe. The leading hypothesis assumes a collision in a binary system between two neutron stars or a neutron star and a black hole spiral in towards each other until they collide. This produces powerful bursts of gamma rays as they merge to form a black hole.
answer
gamma-ray bursts
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New