The sun is the only star whose size we can easily measure directly; astronomers therefore estimate the sizes of other stars using Stefan's law.

(a) The spectrum of Sirius A, plotted as a function of energy, peaks at a photon energy of2.4eV, while Sirius A is approximately 24times as luminous as the sun. How does the radius of Sirius A compare to the sun's radius?

(b) Sirius B, the companion of Sirius A (see Figure 7.12), is only role="math" localid="1647765883396" 3%as luminous as the sun. Its spectrum, plotted as a function of energy, peaks at about7eV. How does its radius compare to that of the sun?

(c) The spectrum of the star Betelgeuse, plotted as a function of energy, peaks at a photon energy of 0.8eV, while Betelgeuse is approximately10,000times as luminous as the sun. How does the radius of Betelgeuse compare to the sun's radius? Why is Betelgeuse called a "red supergiant"?

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) . The radius of Sirius A is 1.69(In units of suns radius).

(b) . The radius of Sirius Bis0.007.

(c) .The radius of Betelgeuseis310.

Step by step solution

01

Step 1. Given information

The formula used is R=LT4to calculate the desired result.

02

Step 2. Calculating the radius of Sirius A  

The surface temperature of SiriusAis given by

2.4eV1.41eV=1.702

role="math" localid="1647766605943" So the radius of Sirius A shouldis

role="math" localid="1647766683798" =24(1.70)4

=1.69(In units of suns radius)

The radius of Sirius A is1.69.

03

Step 3. Calculating the radius of Sirius B

The surface temperature of SiriusBis given by

7eV1.41eV=4.96

Whichis nearly five times the suns temperature, so the radius of Sirius B should be

R=LT4

=0.03(4.96)4

=0.007

As it is less than 1%of suns radius and just slightly smaller than the earth's radius. This result is in rough agreement with that of7.23(d) where we calculated that, one solar - mass white decay should have a radius first slightly larger than earth's.

04

Step 4. Calculating the radius of  Betelgeuse 

The surface temperature ofBetalgeuseis given by

(0.8eV)(1.41eV)=0.57

the radius of Betelgeuse will be

R=LT4

=10,000(0.57)4

=310

As the radius is larger than the radius of earths orbit, and nearly as large as the orbit of mass. Super giant is certainly an approximate term. As for "red" the spectrum of Betelgeuse is certainly redder than the sun, due to its lower temperature of 3300K which makes its spectrum peak well into the infrared and fall of considerably at the blue end of the visible range. But this temperature is still slightly hotter than the filament of an incandescent bulb, so the color of Betelgeuse shouldn't be any redder than that of incandescent light, "yellow-orange' would be a more accurate description.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

If you have a computer system that can do numerical integrals, it's not particularly difficult to evaluate μfor T>Tc.

(a) As usual when solving a problem on a computer, it's best to start by putting everything in terms dimensionless variables. So define t=T/Tc,c=μ/kTc,andx=ϵ/kTc. Express the integral that defines μ, equation N=0g(ϵ)1e(ϵ-μ)/kT-1dϵ, in terms of these variables, you should obtain the equation

2.315=0xdxe(x-c)/t-1

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(c) Now vary μ, holding Tfixed, to find the precise value of μfor T=2Tc. Repeat for values ofT/Tcranging from 1.2up to 3.0, in increments of 0.2. Plot a graph of μas a function of temperature.

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