Conclusion
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A carbon star |
Generally, stars have different colors because they have different
temperatures. However, as you learned in the last question, stars
are not perfect thermal sources. For instance, a
certain type of star called a carbon star has a very red color. Carbon in the
star's atmosphere absorbs much of its blue light, making the cool star
appear even redder than it should for its temperature.
A star's color can usually give you a good idea of its temperature,
but it is always a good idea to double-check by measuring the star's spectrum
with a spectrograph. In fact, whenever the SDSS sees an extremely
red star, software automatically targets the star for follow-up
measurements with the spectrograph.
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The ultimate color-color
diagram - for all stars in the SDSS's Early Data Release |
You can see some of these unusual stars in the graph to the right,
a color-color diagram for all the stars in the SDSS's Early Data Release.
The black dots are normal "main sequence" stars.
All the other stars were flagged by their unusual colors and selected
for follow-up spectral measurements.
Most of the objects that lie outside the black main sequence
are unusual stars, galaxies, or quasars. Although classifying objects
by color is not a foolproof method, you can learn a lot about an
object by looking only at its colors.
Astronomers use colors to classify many objects including
stars, galaxies and quasars. They can use colors to estimate the
spectral types of stars, the types of galaxies, to sort asteroids into
different classes, and to estimate the distances to galaxies and
quasars. In the Research Challenge below, you will use color to
answer your own questions about the sky.
Research
Challenge. Think of a question you would like to answer by
studying the colors of objects in the SDSS database. You may decide
to answer one of the questions below, or you may think of your own.
How do the colors of the
hottest stars vary? Of the coolest?
Can you use a color-color
diagram to identify giant or dwarf stars?
Can you distinguish different
types of galaxies based on their colors?
Can you identify quasars in a
field of stars using only their colors?
Can you identify different
types of quasars based on color?
Can you identify different
types of asteroids based on their colors?
Once you have identified a
question to answer, use SkyServer's tools to look at the SDSS
database. Find several (at least
20-30) of the objects you are interested in and record their
magnitudes. Calculate some or all of the object's colors (u-g, g-r, r-i,
and/or i-z). Make a color-color diagram or examine the spectra of the
objects (for those that have spectra available). Make whatever graphs
you need to understand your question.
When you have finished your
research project,
E-mail us
your results. Send us the
question you were trying to answer, the IDs of the objects you
examined, and whatever graphs or charts you used in your research.
We'll look at all the projects we receive, and we'll put the best of
them up on this site!
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