Friday, August 19, 2011

From Duane

Ok now you are probably thinking, Oh there Duane goes again saying that he's going to catch up on all his blogs, well I just want to say I am sorry for not keeping up on my blogs, however I am starting to feel better now and really want to try and work on each and everyone of my blog at least once a week.

Currently my favorite blogs are Navy's of the World, the military of the world blog, 44 college student and side stepping through life. So I am not giving anyone a promise because my health can drop dramatically with out warning.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Red Dwarf

I can't beleive the last time I posted in this blog was November, man how easy it is to loose track of time and get behind, I'm now going to try and keep this blog up to date, I hope!!

According to the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, a red dwarf star is a small and relatively cool star, of the main sequence, either late K or M spectral type.
An artist's conception of a red dwarf star. Red dwarfs constitute the majority of all stars
 
They constitute the vast majority of stars and have a mass of less than half that of the Sun (down to about 0.075 solar masses, which are brown dwarfs) and a surface temperature of less than 4,000 K.
Stellar models indicate that red dwarfs are fully convective so that the nuclear fuel hydrogen is constantly remixed to be burned to helium. They therefore develop very slowly, having a constant luminosity and spectral type for some hundreds of billions of years, until their fuel is depleted. Because of the comparatively short age of the universe, no red dwarfs of advanced evolutionary stages exist in the current era.


Red dwarfs are very low-mass stars with no more than 40% of the mass of the Sun. Consequently they have relatively low temperatures in their cores and energy is generated at a slow rate through nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium by the proton-proton (PP) chain mechanism. Thus these stars emit little light, sometimes as little as 1/10,000th that of the Sun. Even the largest red dwarfs (for example HD 179930, HIP 12961 and Lacaille 8760) have only about 10% of the Sun's luminosity.


In general red dwarfs transport energy from the core to the surface by convection. Convection occurs because of opacity of the interior, which has a high density compared to the temperature. As a result, energy transfer by radiation is decreased, and instead convection is the main form of energy transport to the surface of the star.




As red dwarfs are fully convective, helium does not accumulate at the core and, compared to larger stars such as the Sun, they can burn a larger proportion of their hydrogen before leaving the main sequence. As a result, red dwarfs have estimated lifespans longer than the estimated age of the universe, and stars with less than 0.8 solar masses have not had time to leave the main sequence. The lower the mass of a red dwarf, the longer the lifespan. It is believed that the lifespan of these stars exceeds the expected 10 billion year lifespan of our Sun by the third or fourth power of the ratio of their masses to the solar mass; thus a red dwarf with 0.1 solar mass may continue burning for 10 trillion years. As the proportion of hydrogen in a red dwarf is consumed, the rate of fusion declines and the core starts to contract. The gravitational energy generated by this size reduction is converted into heat, which is carried throughout the star by convection.
The fact that red dwarfs and other low-mass stars remain on the main sequence while more massive stars have moved off the main sequence allows the age of star clusters to be estimated by finding the mass at which the stars turn off the main sequence. This provides a lower, stellar, age limit to the Universe and also allows formation timescales to be placed upon the structures within the Milky Way galaxy, namely the Galactic halo and Galactic disk.
One mystery which has not been solved as of 2009 is the absence of red dwarf stars with no metals. (In astronomy, a metal is any element heavier than hydrogen or helium). The Big Bang model predicts the first generation of stars should have only hydrogen, helium, and trace amounts of lithium. If such stars included red dwarfs, they should still be observable today, but none have yet been identified. The preferred explanation is that without heavy elements only large and not yet observed population III stars can form, and these rapidly burn out leaving heavy elements which then allow for the formation of red dwarfs. Alternative explanations, such as the idea that zero-metal red dwarfs are dim and could be few in number, are considered much less likely as they seem to conflict with stellar evolution models.
Red dwarfs are the most common star type in the Galaxy, at least in the neighborhood of the Sun. Proxima Centauri, the nearest star to the Sun, is a red dwarf (Type M5, apparent magnitude 11.05), as are twenty of the next thirty nearest. However, due to their low luminosity, individual red dwarfs cannot easily be observed. From Earth, none are visible to the naked eye.

Planets

At least six extrasolar planets were discovered orbiting the red dwarf Gliese 581 between 2005-2010. One planet has about the mass of Neptune, or sixteen Earth masses. It orbits just 6 million kilometers (0.04 AU) from its star, and so is estimated to have a surface temperature of 150 °C, despite the dimness of the star. In 2006, an even smaller extrasolar planet (only 5.5 times the mass of Earth) was found orbiting the red dwarf OGLE-2005-BLG-390L; it lies 390 million km (2.6 AU) from the star and its surface temperature is −220 °C (56 K).
In 2007, a new, potentially habitable extrasolar planet, Gliese 581 c, was found, orbiting Gliese 581. If the minimum mass estimated by its discoverers (a team led by Stephane Udry), namely 5.36 times that of the Earth, is correct, it is the smallest extrasolar planet revolving around a normal star discovered to date and since then Gliese 581 d was discovered which is also potentially habitable. (There are smaller planets known around a neutron star, named PSR B1257+12.) The discoverers estimate its radius to be 1.5 times that of the Earth.

Gliese 581 c and Gliese 581 d are within the habitable zone of Gliese 581, and are the most likely candidates for habitability of any extrasolar planet discovered so far.
An announcement in PhysOrg September 29, 2010 describes the discovery of a remarkable new planet: Gliese 581 g. It has a near-circular orbit in the middle of the star's habitable zone and liquid water could occur in some regions on its surface. If confirmed, this would be the most Earth-like exoplanet yet discovered, and the first strong case for a potentially habitable one. Gliese 581 g has a mass three to four times that of Earth and an orbit of about 37 days. It is probably a rocky planet with plenty of gravity to retain a more massive atmosphere than Earth. However, as to be expected for a planet in close orbit round a red dwarf, it is tidally locked, with one face perpetually in darkness and cold, probably covered in glaciers of frozen atmosphere. The implications for the possibility of life on the planet are complex and uncertain. The greatest point of uncertainty is not whether an environment as stable and varied as the surface of that planet could sustain life, but whether the radiation supplied by a red dwarf could generate life in the first place.

Habitability

An artist's impression of a planet in orbit around a red dwarf.
 
Planetary habitability of red dwarf star systems is subject to some debate. In spite of their great numbers and long lifespans, there are several factors which may make life difficult on planets around a red dwarf star. First, planets in the habitable zone of a red dwarf would be so close to the parent star that they would likely be tidally locked. This would mean that one side would be in perpetual daylight and the other in eternal night. This could create enormous temperature variations from one side of the planet to the other. Such conditions would appear to make it difficult for forms of life similar to those on Earth to evolve. And it appears there is a great problem with the atmosphere of such tidally locked planets: the perpetual night zone would be cold enough to freeze the main gases of its atmosphere, leaving the daylight zone nude and dry. On the other hand, recent theories propose that either a thick atmosphere or planetary ocean could potentially circulate heat around such a planet, or life could survive by migration. Alternatively, a moon in orbit around a gas giant planet may be habitable. It would circumvent the tidal lock problem by becoming tidally locked to its planet. This way there would be a day/night cycle as the moon orbited its primary, and there would be distribution of heat.
In addition, red dwarfs emit most of their radiation as infrared light, while on Earth plants use energy mostly in the visible spectrum. Red dwarfs emit almost no ultraviolet light, which would be a problem if UV is required for life to exist. Variability in stellar energy output may also have negative impacts on development of life. Red dwarfs are often covered by starspots, reducing stellar output by as much as 40% for months at a time. At other times, some red dwarfs, called flare stars, can emit gigantic flares, doubling their brightness in minutes. This variability may also make it difficult for life to develop and persist near a red dwarf star. Gibor Basri of the University of California, Berkeley claims a planet orbiting close to a red dwarf star could keep its atmosphere even if the star flares.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Our Sun The Basics


Our Sun A Yellow Dwarf/Photo Astronomy for armatures

Our Sun is not unique in the universe. It is a common middle-sized yellow star which scientists have named Sol. This is why our system of planets is called the Solar System. There are trillions of other stars in the Universe just like it. Many of these stars have their own systems of planets, moons, asteroids, and comets.
The Sun was born in a vast cloud of gas and dust around 5 billion years ago. Indeed these vast nebulae are the birth places of all stars. Over a period of many millions of years, this gas and dust began to fall into a common center under the force of its own gravity.

At the center, an ever growing body of mass was forming. As matter falls inward, it generates a tremendous amount of heat and pressure. As it grew, the baby Sun became hotter and hotter. Eventually when it reached a temperature of around 1 million degrees, its core ignited, causing it to begin nuclear fusion
When this happened, the Sun began producing its own light, heat, and energy.

Nuclear fusion is how stars produce their light, heat, and energy. Through this process, they “burn” a fuel known as hydrogen. The result is that they create another type of matter known as helium. However, stars do not burn in the same way that a fire does, because stars are not on fire.
Heat rises, while cooler gas falls. Have you ever noticed that your basement is always much cooler than upstairs. The same laws of physics apply within stars. Because heat rises, while cooler gases fall, the gas within stars is constantly rising and falling. This creates massive streams of circular motion within the star. This is called convection.

As the gases near the core of the Sun are heated, they begin to rise towards the surface. As they do so, they cool somewhat. Eventually, they become cool enough that they begin to sink back down towards the core. It can take an atom millions of years to complete one complete cycle around a convection stream.

On a side note in a recent poll conducted by a leading astronomy magazine found that 55% of adults in the United States don't know that the sun is a typical star, the Sun is known as a yellow dwarf star. This group of stars are relatively small, containing between 80% and 100% the mass of the sun. So the Sun is at the higher end of this group. The official designation is as a G V star.

We will continue the current topic of exploring our sun in the next post, hope you enjoyed today's post and learnt something new.

Friday, November 19, 2010

A Series on the Sun

OUR SUN/PHOTO SPACESTATIONINFO.COM
OK m friends I'm sorry it has been exactly a month since I last posted here, so I am going to get myself motivated and start out a series of posts regarding the sun, not sure how many entries there may be in this series I guess all of us will stand by and see.

The sun is a star which is very closer to earth than any other star and appears very large and bright. Without the Sun's light and heat, there would be no life on Earth. The Sun is a ball of plasma with a mass of about 2×1030 kg. The sun is mainly composed of hydrogen and helium; it contains about 70% of hydrogen, 28% of helium and less than 2% of other metals. The outer atmosphere of sun has a temperature of over 106 K when its visible surface (the photosphere) has a temperature of just 6,000 K. Solar energy is transformed by plants into chemical energy, which is the first step in the food chain for all living things. The Sun has been around for about 4.6 billion years and is expected to keep burning bright for another 5 billion years.

COMPOSITION OF OUR SUN

  1. HYDROGEN-73.46%                                                                 6.  NEON-12%
  2. HELIUM-24.85%                                                                        7.  NITROGEN-0.09%
  3. OXYGEN-0.77%                                                                        8.  SILICON -0.07%
  4. CARBON-0.29%                                                                        9.  MAGNESIUM-0.05%
  5. IRON-0.16%                                                                             10.  SULFUR-0.04%
Something I found that I thought was interesting was that you always hear astronomers talking about the solar "surface," the Sun is actually s hot that it neither liquid or solid matter anywhere inside it. Moving down through the Sun, one continually encounters ever denser and hotter gases.

The Sun only appears to have a surface because most of it's visible light comes from one specific gas layer. This region which is only about 249 miles thick is called the photosphere. The photosphere is the innermost of the three layers comprising the Sun's atmosphere. Because the upper two layers are transparent to most wavelengths of visible light, we see through them down to the down to the photosphere. We cannot, however, see through the shimmering gases of the photosphere, so everything below the photosphere is called the Sun's interior.

Next entry we will continue with The Sun Part II

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

How was the moon formed?

Hello everyone and welcome to my first official post of my new astronomy blog, I am hoping I can make this as intresting as I possibly can, and since I am just a novice in astronomy none of which I post should be over anyones head.

The first question I am going to try and cover is how was the moon was created. Currently there are four theroies that astronomers today are kicking around, these four are the capture theory, the cocreation theory, the collision-ejection theory and the last being the fission theory.

The fission theory holds that the Moon was pulled out from a rapidly rotating proto-Earth. This theory does not explain why the Moon has birtually no water incorporated in its rocks, as revealed by the bone-dry samples brouht back by Appollo astronauts. A simple way of stating this is that as the newly formed Earth was rotating at a much faster speed than it does today a blob of material seperated from Earth and became the moon, however if this theory was true there would be traces of water in the rock samples taken from the Moon and not a trace of water has ever been found.

The Capture theory says that the Moon was formed elsewhere in the solar system and then was drawn into orbit about the Earthby gravitatioal forces. However, it is physically very difficult for a planet to capture a large moon. Furthermore, because bodies formed in differnt places have different overall chemical compositions, this theory fails to explain the similar geochemistries of the Moon and the Earth's surfaces.

The cocreation theory proposes that the Earth and the Moon were formed near each other at the same time. However, this theory fails to explain why, compared to the Earth, the Moon has less of the denser elements, such as iron, and why certain types of rocks found on the Moon are not found on Earth.

The fourth theory, now held to be correct by most astronomer is the collision-ejection theory, or large impact theory, it proposes that the newly formed Earth was struck at an angle by a Mars-sized astroid that literally splashed some of the Earth's surface layers into orbitaround the young planet. Evidence from Moon rocks places this event at around 4.5 billion years ago, whithin the first 100 million years of the Earth's existance.

The collision-ejection theory is consistent with many of the known facts about the Moon. For example, rock vaporized by the impact would have been depleted of volatile (easily evaporated) elements and water, leaving the Moon rocks parched, as we know they are. Also, the Moon has very little heavy iron-rich matter because the mateerial had sunk deep into the Earth before the asteroid struck. The material from the Earth that splashed ito orbit and formed the Moon was mostly the lighter rock floating on the Earth's surface. Furthermore, most of the debris from the collision would orbit near the plane of the ecliptic as long as the orbit of the impacting asteroid had been near that plane. Also, the impact of an object large enough to create the Moon could have tipped the Earth's axis of rotation and so inaugurated the seasons we experince today.

I hope any of you (if anyone) who have read this learned something from it, I myself find astronomy very intersting. If you have any questions you would like me to explore please don't hesitate to ask.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Introduction

Hello and welcome to my blog Learning Astronomy, if you made it this far into the various blogs I have running around the Internet than I'm sure you have seen plenty about who I am so I will get right down to why I am writing this blog.

As you probably already know I am 44 years old and currently attending San Diego City College full time on my 9/11 GI Bill. If you are a veteran who separated or retired after 9/11 I suggest you get in touch with your local VA office and check this program out, out of all the previous GI bills in this history of our military this the one with the most benefits, where unlike other GI Bills where you have to pay in money, the only requirement is that you served and got an Honorable Discharge after 9/11.

OK the one thing I believe the only thing in this world that benefits everyone is an education, and I'm not necessarily talking about an education where you have to sit through a boring class or sit in front of a blackboard type program in front of your computer. I myself am a life long learner. It may sound boring to you but even as a child the majority of books I read was something you can learn from, whet er its a book about history, science, math or what ever. Even my wife and sister in law call me data man.

This blog itself is just me wanting to pass on to you what I have learned in my Astronomy class here at San Diego City College, I have found this class very int resting and I believe many are interested in space but don't have the money or time to go to college or for that matter to spend money on books from places like Amazon or Barnes and Noble. So that is my purpose here. Just to pass on what I have learned about astronomy to those who may be interested.

One thing I do want you to know, is that I am very interested in what others think, if you have an opp ion about something I've posted, about this blog in general or even about me, I am open to criticism. If you think what I am doing here is stupid don't be shy tell me so, I may not agree with you but go ahead and bounce it off of me any way.

Well that's enough of my spouting off, I hope that you will enjoy this blog or any others I may have written. I've made quite of few and I know I have some out there that I have forgotten about. If you find one of mine that hasn't been posted in for a month or two or even a year or two let me know so I can go back and look into it.

Thank You for stopping by.