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Stars seen by
the SDSS camera |
Spectral Types
When astronomers look through their telescopes, they see billions of
stars. How do they make sense of all these stars? How do they classify stars
into types, and how do they tell which types are common and which are rare? Most
importantly, how do they use the star types they see to learn useful
information about stars?
If you have already completed the Color project, you learned
one way to understand stars: stars with different colors have different
temperatures. In the Colors project, you looked at the thermal radiation curves
of several stars. You found the peak wavelengths of these curves and calculated
the temperatures of the stars.
However, you might have wondered what happens when a star's peak wavelength is not
visible on our spectrum. For a very hot star, the peak wavelength
may be well into the ultraviolet wavelength range. For a very cool star,
the peak wavelength may be well into the infrared. Do astronomers have other ways
to find the temperature of a star from its spectrum, even if the star's peak
wavelength is too short or too long to show up?
Fortunately, they do.
Spectral Peaks and Valleys
If thermal radiation were the only source of light from a star, the
star's spectrum would be a nice smooth curve. However, actual spectra
observed from stars have a series of peaks and valleys as shown in the
spectrum below, meaning some of their light comes from "non-thermal"
radiation - light emitted or absorbed by a process other than random jostling
of atoms. In the next section, you will learn what this process is.
The spectrum below, from the SDSS spectral database, is a typical example of
the spectrum of a star:
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Click on the image to see it full size |
Many of these peaks and valleys have labels on them. You may
recognize some of these labels as the symbols of chemical elements.
Every star has a unique pattern of peaks and valleys,
and these patterns can be grouped into "spectral types" of stars.
The traditional spectral types are denoted by the letters
O,B,A,F,G,K,M (and some new spectral types have been added
in the last couple of years...more on those later!)
Before you find out what these letters mean, take a
shot at developing your own system for classifying stars based on their spectra.
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