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The disk formation process of the previous chapter forms the basis for the “Nebular Model” for the formation of planetary systems, including our own solar system. As a proto-stellar cloud collapses under the pull of its own gravity, conservation of its initial angular momentum leads naturally to formation of an orbiting disk, which surrounds the central core mass that forms the developing star. We then explore the “ice line” between inner rocky dwarf planets and outer gas giants.
To understand ways we might infer stellar distances, we first consider how we intuitively estimate distance in our everyday world, through apparent angular size, and/or using our stereoscopic vision. We explain a practical, quite direct way to infer distances to relatively nearby stars, namely through the method of trigonometric parallax. This leads to the definition of the astronomical unit and parsec, and the concept of solid angles on the sky, measured in steradians or square degrees.
Following directly the from the previous chapter, we see that in addition to a shift toward shorter peak wavelength, a higher temperature also increases the overall brightness of blackbody emission at all wavelengths. This suggests that the total energy emitted over all wavelengths should increase quite sharply with temperature. We introduce the Stefan–Boltzmann law, one of the linchpins of stellar astronomy.
Our initial introduction of surface brightness characterized it as a flux confined within an observed solid angle. But actually the surface brightness is directly related to a more general and fundamental quantity known as the “specific intensity.” The light we see from a star is the result of competition between thermal emission and absorption by material within the star.
Compared with stars, the region between them, called the interstellar medium or “ISM,” is very low density; but it is not a completely empty vacuum. A key theme in this chapter is that stars are themselves formed out of this ISM material through gravitational contraction, making for a star–gas–star cycle. We explore the characteristics of cold and warm regions of the ISM and their roles in star formation.
We now consider why stars shine with such extreme brightness. Over the long-term (i.e., millions of years), the enormous energy emitted comes from the energy generated (by nuclear fusion) in the stellar core, as discussed further in Chapter 18. But the more immediate reason stars shine is more direct, namely because their surfaces are so very hot. We explore the key physical laws governing such thermal radiation and how it depends on temperature.
This chapter explores what is known as the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), what it is, how it was discovered and our recent efforts to measure and map it. In general, the analysis finds remarkably good overall agreement with predictions of the now-standard “lambda CDM” model of a universe, in which there is both cold dark matter (CDM) to spur structure formation, as well as dark-energy acceleration that is well-represented by a cosmological constant, lambda. From this we can infer 13.8 Gyr for the age of the universe.
The timescale analyses in Chapter 8 show that nuclear fusion provides a long-lasting energy source that we can associate with main-sequence stars in the H–R diagram. This chapter addresses the following questions: What are the requirements for H to He fusion to occur in the stellar core? And how is this to be related to the luminosity versus surface temperature scaling for main-sequence stars? In particular, how might this determine the relation between mass and radius? What does it imply about the lower mass limit for stars to undergo hydrogen fusion?
We walk through the different epochs and eras of the universe, going forward in time from the Hot Big Bang. In the earliest universe, radiation (photons) dominated over matter. As the universe cools, electrons are able to recombine with protons, then helium and other light elements were formed in the first few minutes. Cosmic inflation is posited to overcome several problems, but investigations to probe and perhaps confirm inflation are ongoing.
This chapter gives a brief overview of observational astronomy, using optical instruments and other wavelengths. We present a general formula for the increase in the limiting magnitude resulting from an increased telescope aperture. For light of particular wavelength, the diffraction from a telescope with a specific diameter sets a fundamental limit to the smallest possible angular separation that can be resolved.
Observations of binary systems indicate that main sequence stars follow an empirical mass–luminosity relation L ~ M3. The physical basis for this can be understood by considering the two basic relations of stellar structure, namely hydrostatic equilibrium and radiative diffusion. In practice, the transport of energy from the stellar interior toward the surface sometimes occurs through convection instead of radiative diffusion; this has important consequence for stellar structure and thus for the scaling of luminosity.
The study of stellar dynamics is experiencing an exciting new wave of interest thanks to observational campaigns and the ready availability of powerful computers. Whilst its relevance includes many areas of astrophysics, from the structure of the Milky Way to dark matter halos, few texts are suited to advanced students. This volume provides a broad overview of the key concepts beyond the elementary level, bridging the gap between the standard texts and specialist literature. The author reviews Newtonian gravity in depth before examining the dynamical properties of collisional and collisionless stellar-dynamical systems that result from gravitational interactions. Guided examples and exercises ensure a thorough grounding in the mathematics, while discussions of important practical applications give a complete picture of the subject. Readers are given a sound working knowledge of the fundamental ideas and techniques employed in the field and the conceptual background needed to progress to more advanced graduate-level treatises.
We present an overview of the SkyMapper optical follow-up programme for gravitational-wave event triggers from the LIGO/Virgo observatories, which aims at identifying early GW170817-like kilonovae out to $\sim200\,\mathrm{Mpc}$ distance. We describe our robotic facility for rapid transient follow-up, which can target most of the sky at $\delta<+10\deg $ to a depth of $i_\mathrm{AB}\approx 20\,\mathrm{mag}$. We have implemented a new software pipeline to receive LIGO/Virgo alerts, schedule observations and examine the incoming real-time data stream for transient candidates. We adopt a real-bogus classifier using ensemble-based machine learning techniques, attaining high completeness ($\sim98\%$) and purity ($\sim91\%$) over our whole magnitude range. Applying further filtering to remove common image artefacts and known sources of transients, such as asteroids and variable stars, reduces the number of candidates by a factor of more than 10. We demonstrate the system performance with data obtained for GW190425, a binary neutron star merger detected during the LIGO/Virgo O3 observing campaign. In time for the LIGO/Virgo O4 run, we will have deeper reference images allowing transient detection to $i_\mathrm{AB}\approx 21\,\mathrm{mag}$.
Star-formation is one of the key processes that shape the current state and evolution of galaxies. This volume provides a comprehensive presentation of the different methods used to measure the intensity of recent or on-going star-forming activity in galaxies, discussing their advantages and complications in detail. It includes a thorough overview of the theoretical underpinnings of star-formation rate indicators, including topics such as stellar evolution and stellar spectra, the stellar initial mass function, and the physical conditions in the interstellar medium. The authors bring together in one place detailed and comparative discussions of traditional and new star-formation rate indicators, star-formation rate measurements in different spatial scales, and comparisons of star-formation rate indicators probing different stellar populations, along with the corresponding theoretical background. This is a useful reference for students and researchers working in the field of extragalactic astrophysics and studying star-formation in local and higher-redshift galaxies.
We present the first Southern-Hemisphere all-sky imager and radio-transient monitoring system implemented on two prototype stations of the low-frequency component of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA-Low). Since its deployment, the system has been used for real-time monitoring of the recorded commissioning data. Additionally, a transient searching algorithm has been executed on the resulting all-sky images. It uses a difference imaging technique to enable identification of a wide variety of transient classes, ranging from human-made radio-frequency interference to genuine astrophysical events. Observations at the frequency 159.375 MHz and higher in a single coarse channel ($\approx$0.926 MHz) were made with 2 s time resolution, and multiple nights were analysed generating thousands of images. Despite having modest sensitivity ($\sim$ few Jy beam–1), using a single coarse channel and 2-s imaging, the system was able to detect multiple bright transients from PSR B0950+08, proving that it can be used to detect bright transients of an astrophysical origin. The unusual, extreme activity of the pulsar PSR B0950+08 (maximum flux density $\sim$155 Jy beam–1) was initially detected in a ‘blind’ search in the 2020 April 10/11 data and later assigned to this specific pulsar. The limitations of our data, however, prevent us from making firm conclusions of the effect being due to a combination of refractive and diffractive scintillation or intrinsic emission mechanisms. The system can routinely collect data over many days without interruptions; the large amount of recorded data at 159.375 and 229.6875 MHz allowed us to determine a preliminary transient surface density upper limit of $1.32 \times 10^{-9} \text{deg}^{-2}$ for a timescale and limiting flux density of 2 s and 42 Jy, respectively. In the future, we plan to extend the observing bandwidth to tens of MHz and improve time resolution to tens of milliseconds in order to increase the sensitivity and enable detections of fast radio bursts below 300 MHz.