Title: Spectral Classification
1Spectral Classification
- Oh Be A Fine Guy/Gal Kiss Me
2How do we Classify and why?
- In astronomy, stellar classification is a
classification of stars based initially on
photoshperic temperatures and its associated
spectral characteristics, and then refined in
terms of other characteristics. - Early stellar classification by temperatures
posed difficulties for distant stars. Stellar
spectroscopy offers a way to classify stars
according to their absorption lines particular
absorption lines can be observed only for a
certain range of temperatures because only in
that range are the involved atomic energy levels
populated.
3Example
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5How Atoms Produce Spectra!
6.M Stars.
- Class M is by far the most common class if we go
by the number of stars. All the red dwarfs go in
here and they are plentiful over 78 of stars
are red dwarfs. - Examples Betelgeuse, Anteres
7ANTARES In Scorpio
8Betelguese in Orion
9.K Stars.
- Class K are orangish stars which are slightly
cooler than our Sun. Some K stars are giants and
supergiants, such as Arcturus while others are
main sequence stars. These make up some 13 of
main sequence stars. - Examples Acrturus
10ARTURUS in Bootes
11.G Stars.
- Class G stars are probably the most well known if
only for the reason that our Sun is of this
class. G is host to the "Yellow Evolutionary
Void". Supergiant stars often swing between O or
B (blue) and K or M (red). While they do this,
they do not stay for long in the G classification
as this is an extremely unstable place for a
supergiant to be. These are about 8 of all main
sequence stars. - Examples Sun, Capella
12.F Stars.
- Class F stars are still quite powerful but they
tend to be main sequence stars.Their color is
white with a slight tinge of yellow. These
represent 3.1 of all main sequence stars. - Examples Canopus, Procyon
13 Procyon
Canopus
14.A Stars.
- Class A stars are amongst the more common naked
eye stars. As with all class A stars, they are
white or green. Many white dwarfs are also A.
They comprise perhaps 0.63 of all main sequence
stars. - Examples Vega, Sirius
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16.B Stars.
- Class B stars are extremely luminous and blue.
As O and B stars are so powerful, they live for a
very short time. They do not stray far from the
area in which they were formed as they don't have
the time. They therefore tend to cluster together
in what we call OB1 associations. and contains
all of the constellation of Orion. They
constitute about 0.13 of main sequence stars --
rare, but much more common than those of class O.
- Examples Rigel, Spica
17.O Stars.
- Class O stars are very hot and very luminous,
being strongly violet in color in fact, most of
their output is in the ultraviolet range. These
are the rarest of all main sequence stars,
constituting as little as 1/32,000th of the
total. O-stars shine with a power over a million
times our Sun's output. - Examples Epsilon Orionis
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20Cepheid Variables
- Cepheid variables are stars that regularly
pulsate in size and change in brightness. As the
star increases in size, its brightness decreases
then, the reverse occurs. Cepheid Variables may
not be permanently variable the fluctuations may
just be an unstable phase the star is going
through. Polaris in an examples of a Cepheid.
21BINARY SYSTEMS
22Eclipsing Binary
- An eclipsing binary is two close stars that
appear to be a single star varying in brightness.
The variation in brightness is due to the stars
periodically obscuring or enhancing one another.
This binary star system is tilted (with respect
to us) so that its orbital plane is viewed from
its edge.
23Oh Be A Fine Guy/Gal Kiss Me
Class Temperature Star Color (visible light) Mass Radius Luminosity
O 30,000 - 60,000 K Bluish 60 15 1,400,000
B 10,000 - 30,000 K Bluish 18 7 20,000
A 7,500 - 10,000 K White bluish tinge 3.2 2.5 80
F 6,000 - 7,500 K White 1.7 1.3 6
G 5,000 - 6,000 K Yellowish white 1.1 1.1 1.2
K 3,500 - 5,000 K Yellow-orange 0.8 0.9 0.4
M 2,000 - 3,500 K Orange-red 0.3 0.4 0.04
24Thanks Annie!
- Annie Jump Cannon and many other Harvard women
dedicated hours to this classification system and
analyzed millions of spectral absorption plates.
In the end their male counterparts took all the
credit, but the real work was done by a room of
amazing female astrophysicist, and Annie Cannon
devised the classification we use today!