Understanding Our Universe
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780393614428
Author: PALEN, Stacy, Kay, Laura, Blumenthal, George (george Ray)
Publisher: W.w. Norton & Company,
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Chapter 10.1, Problem 10.1CYU
To determine
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Which star is brighter as seen from the Earth? (you only have one try for this problem)
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The luminosity of a star is 6.6 x 1031 W and the peak wavelength in its spectrum is 4.6 x 10-7 m. Calculate the surface area of that star.
Round off the answer to 2 decimal places with scientific representation.
Chapter 10 Solutions
Understanding Our Universe
Ch. 10.1 - Prob. 10.1CYUCh. 10.2 - Prob. 10.2CYUCh. 10.3 - Prob. 10.3CYUCh. 10.4 - Prob. 10.4CYUCh. 10 - Prob. 1QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 2QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 3QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 4QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 5QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 6QAP
Ch. 10 - Prob. 7QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 8QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 9QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 10QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 11QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 12QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 13QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 14QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 15QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 16QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 17QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 18QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 19QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 20QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 21QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 22QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 23QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 24QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 25QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 26QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 27QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 28QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 29QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 31QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 32QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 33QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 34QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 35QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 36QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 37QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 38QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 39QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 40QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 41QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 42QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 43QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 44QAPCh. 10 - Prob. 45QAP
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Which method would you use to obtain the distance to each of the following? A. An asteroid crossing Earth’s orbit B. A star astronomers believe to be no more than 50 light-years from the Sun C. A tight group of stars in the Milky Way Galaxy that includes a significant number of variable stars D. A star that is not variable but for which you can obtain a clearly defined spectrumarrow_forwardStar A and Star B have different apparent brightnesses but identical luminosities. If Star A is 20 light-years away from Earth and Star B is 40 light-years away from Earth, which star appears brighter and by what factor?arrow_forwardAn astronomer is investigating a faint star that has recently been discovered in very sensitive surveys of the sky. The star has a magnitude of 16. How much less bright is it than Antares, a star with magnitude roughly equal to 1?arrow_forward
- Based on their colors, which of the following stars is hottest? Which is coolest? Archenar (blue), Betelgeuse (red), Capella (yellow).arrow_forwardWhat is the advantage of measuring a parallax distance to a star as compared to our other distance measuring methods?arrow_forwardIn Appendix J, how much more luminous is the most luminous of the stars than the least luminous? For Exercise 17.33 through Exercise 17.38, use the equations relating magnitude and apparent brightness given in the section on the magnitude scale in The Brightness of Stars and Example 17.1.arrow_forward
- What two factors determine how bright a star appears to be in the sky?arrow_forwardReview this spectral data for five stars. Which is the hottest? Coolest? Most luminous? Least luminous? In each case, give your reasoning.arrow_forwardTwo stars have the exact same luminosity, but star Y is four times dimmer looking that star X. This means that???? 1) star Y is four times as far away as star X 2) star Y is 16 times as far away as star X 3) star Y is half as far away as star X 4) star Y is twice as far away as star X 5) we can't figure out the relative distance of the two stars from the information givenarrow_forward
- Stars A and B both have the same spectral class. Star A is 7 times farther away than star B. The brightness of star A will be ________ times dimmer than B. (Give a number.)arrow_forwardStars A and B both have the same spectral class. Star A is 7 times farther away than star B. The brightness of star A will be ________ times dimmer than B. a. 100 b. 14 c. 7 d. 49 e. 10arrow_forwardThe spectrum of a typical star shows absorption lines at different wavelengths than their laboratory values. If the observed wavelength is less than its laboratory value of 656.3 nm, one can conclude that... A. The separation between Earth and the star is decreasing. B. The separation between Earth and the star is increasing. C. The separation between Earth and the star is unchanging D. No conclusion is possible.arrow_forward
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