Non-Spherical Stars 70
An anonymous reader writes "Now that the large interferometers are coming on line, the stars are no longer dots. Achernar (Alpha Eridani), is a huge ellipsoid whose polar radius (due to fast spinning) is 50% smaller than the equatorial one!"
Husky stars (Score:3, Funny)
=Brian
Re:Husky stars (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Husky stars (Score:2)
Maybe we should implement a tax on them? We could use this [slashdot.org] as a model.
Press release here: (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-rel/pr-2003/pr-
Including more technical drawings.
-molo
Energy output (Score:4, Interesting)
Perhps i don't really kow what i am talking about.
Re:Energy output (Score:3, Informative)
Earth spins about
Said star spins 220-300 km/s
Obviously the star isn't a body of a uniform density. Possibly not conforming to known ideas regarding rotating solid masses in general.
I wish I had a better physics comprehension in times like this...
Re:Energy output (Score:3, Insightful)
,i>Possibly not conforming to known ideas regarding rotating solid masses in general.
Well that makes sense, seeing as how this isn't a solid mass in the first place.
Re:Energy output (Score:3, Insightful)
IIRC, it is composed of a 'liquid' core that is rotating as well (and faster than the rotation of the earth about the sun).
No planet, to anything other than a zeroth order calculation, follows the I=MR^2 rule of solid spheres for inertial mass.
yes, it does affect luminosity of the star (Score:4, Informative)
(i) Faster rotating stars are brighter at their poles than their equators (because of centripetal force slightly expanding the distance of the equator from the core of the star), and:
(ii) The spin axes of stars are randomly oriented with respect to telescopes on Earth, so:
(iii) For a large sample of fast rotating stars, you sample all the brightnesses from the equator to the poles, hence a large scatter in measured brightness. You can assume that all stars are effectively at the same distance if they are in a distant cluster.
Hope that's reasonably clear,
Dr Fish
Re:yes, it does affect luminosity of the star (Score:1)
Or are you saying that there is line broadening do the the fast rotation in the individual stars. that is, you would
Re:yes, it does affect luminosity of the star (Score:2)
Right. The left side of the star may be coming towards you dopplershifting it to the blue, and the right side may be moving away dopplershifting it to the red.
As you look from one side of the the star to the other to smoothly range between the two effects. Every line gets "smeared" across a range.
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Cosmic Rugby (Score:3, Funny)
I found your rubgy ball!
Re:Cosmic Rugby (Score:2)
Re:Cosmic Rugby (Score:1)
Re:Cosmic Rugby (Score:2, Funny)
Amateur Astronomy (Score:3, Funny)
I crush you... (Score:5, Funny)
I think someone was doing that at the end of the telescope.
Re:I crush you... (Score:2, Funny)
Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:2, Interesting)
maybe only a few percent of the radius in the other directions.
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:1)
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:2)
Now, imagine two points equidistant from the black hole, one above the pole
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:1)
Key phrase: "with the same force." More in a sec.
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:3, Informative)
Real black holes are likely to be spinning. And then they aren't spherical, as I recall. Also, their horizons start to seperate. Things get a *leeetle* bit weird from there on out.
More Please (Score:2)
Any more insite on that, or is it complete wash?
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:1)
The black hole itself (that is, the matter that constitutes it) can be whatever shape it wants to be. What we're talking about is the shape of the event horizon, which is purely defined by the escape velocity, which is purely defined by the gravitational attraction at a certain distance, which is purely defined by the mass and distance from center point. All points at a certain distance from a point a sphere; that'
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:2)
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:1)
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:2)
Then read the book. It's a good read, anyway.
In any event, the event horizon need not be a sphere for the simple reason that you're not worried about how far from the singularity you are, you cannot know that. (Information cannot propogate outward from inside the horizon to any point further out.) What you care about is local spacetime. Since spacetime gets dragged by spinning objects, there is no real reason to expect spinning black holes to loo
Re:Black holes must be flat dishes (Score:1)
This has been done before. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This has been done before. (Score:2)
I'm reasonably sure that it was done decades before that, even. Burnham's Celestial Handbook [amazon.com] mentions some figures for the oblateness of Altair, and the handbook was last updated in, IIRC, the late 1970s.
That being said, I'm sure the latest work is much more advanced.
The difference ... (Score:2)
our sun, the planets (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:our sun, the planets (Score:1)
The fact that we can measure it is a breakthrough.
You got that right. Who would've thought we could start to resolve the diameters of other stars within our lifetimes?? Astromony never ceases to amaze.
The truth of observation that astronomy has advanced more in the last 30 years than the over entire previous history of man must surely give the power of Moore's Law a run for its money.
Re:our sun, the planets (Score:2, Informative)
Considering that Albert Michelson (yes, that Michelson) made the first measurement of another star (not the Sun) in 1920 [aavso.org] (about a third or the way down the page for that detail), the question is probably more like how old are you? My parents weren't born yet when that happened.
Re:our sun, the planets (Score:1)
Re:our sun, the planets (Score:2)
The large interferometers use this same method where they make a whole bunch of fringe observations (for N apertures, you can measure N(N-1)/2 fringes), but the basic me
Re:our sun, the planets (Score:1)
Re:our sun, the planets (Score:2)
Re:our sun, the planets (Score:3, Informative)
The modern interferometers, besides having very long observing baselines,
The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.eso.org/projects/vlti/
Quote:
The Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) consists in the coherent combination of the four VLT Unit Telescopes and of several moveable 1.8m Auxiliary Telescopes. Once fully operational, the VLTI will provide both a high sensitivity as well as milli-arcsec angular resolution provided by baselines of up to 200m length.
Shape of the earth (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Shape of the earth (Score:1)
Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:3, Interesting)
Due to its daily rotation, the solid Earth is slightly flattened...
Solid Earth? Only the surface (and part of the core) is solid, right? The rest is [Dr. Evil] liquid hot magma.
The observed flattening cannot be reproduced by the "Roche-model" that implies solid-body rotation and mass concentration at the center of the star.
I thought stars were pretty much all plasma, which is to say, a fluid. Why, therefore, should stars obey any "solid-body" rule at all?
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:3, Informative)
While I'm getting technical, Plasma can't be considered a fluid either, as it's not a liquid, it's a different state of matter altogether.
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:1)
Ermmmm...and how is that different from solid in the usual sense?
Unless I'm mistaken, a fluid is any state of matter in which the molecules flow freely and assume the shape of the container (i.e., liquid, gas, or plasma). How is a plasma not a fluid?
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:1)
A cohesive object doesn't have to be made of matter in a solid state. You can't move through three feet of ice (by yourself anyways), but you can jump into a lake or walk through a fog.
Plasma is a collection of charged particles that have some of the
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:2)
Actually, it will try to fill the space it's in, just like any other gas. It can be impeded from doing so by magnetic fields (including fields generated by its own motion), but this is not a permanent state of affairs.
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:1)
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:2)
because [spacescience.org] it's [pppl.gov] plasma [nasa.gov]!
"Although plasma includes electrons and ions and conducts electricity, it is macroscopically neutral: in measurable quantities, the number of electrons and ions are equal. The charged particles are affected by electric and magnetic fields applied to the plasma, and the motions of the particles in the plasma generate fields and electric currents from within. This complex set of interactions makes plasma a unique, fascinating, and complex state of matter."
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:5, Informative)
This exchange is about on par with "How is a liquid not a fluid?" "Because it's a liquid."
"Fluid" is not a state of matter, no one's claiming it's a state of matter, saying plasma can't be a fluid because plasma is the 4th state of matter is a category error. Liquid is the second state of matter. Gas is the third state of matter. Both are fluids.
A fluid is any substance which undergoes continuous deformation when subjected to a shear stress. The problem we're probably having is that the obvious sources for the shear stresses in the couse of, say, water being poured from a cup (normal force of the side of the cup vs gravity) are paralleled for the case of plasma by electromagnetic feilds. It just don't grok intuitively but, plasma behaves like a fluid... ergo, it is a fluid.
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:2)
that's what you get for posting before the coffee break...
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:1)
Peace! (Score:2)
OK, thanks for educating us as to the physicist's definition of the word fluid. And in that context it does make sense to call gas or plasma (or sand or granulated sugar) a fluid. It also makes sense with the original Latin word fluidus, "flowing".
But most people aren't physicists or classical scholars. So they use "fluid" as a synonym for "liquid". That's not a sign of rampant stupidity, it's just the way i
Re:Who writes these articles? Or am I iggernint? (Score:2)
This complex set of interactions makes plasma a unique, fascinating, and complex state of matter.
Gases and liquids are different states of matter, both fluids.Re:The Earth is largely solid (Score:1)
According to this nice summary [usgs.gov], the mantle (asthenosphere part of it, anyway) is "semi-solid". Other sources describe it as akin to toothpase or silly putty.
Theoretical maximum for common stellar materials? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd imagine one can only attain this through centrifugal force, which necessarily puts structural stress on the star, and past a certain amount of structural stress stars should disintegrate.
Re:Theoretical maximum for common stellar material (Score:5, Interesting)
The better question is this: how did that star form? If it was spinning too fast to hold together, how did it accrete matter with that much angular momentum at all?
* Barring magnetic fields, mind you. But you'd need an ass-kicking field to hold a star together very long, I would think.
Re:Theoretical maximum for common stellar material (Score:3, Informative)
The indicated ratio between the equatorial and polar radii of Achernar constitutes an unprecedented challenge for theoretical astrophysics, in particular concerning mass loss from the surface enhanced by the rapid rotation (the centrifugal effect) and also the distribution of internal angular momentum (the rotation velocity at different depths).
The astronomers conclude that Achernar must either rotate faster (and hence, closer to the "critical" (break
Re:Theoretical maximum for common stellar material (Score:2)
Re:Theoretical maximum for common stellar material (Score:2)
Hal Clement (Score:3, Interesting)
The story is about natives on the planet, but the physics alone is worth the read. It's quite a strange place.
50% smaller? Ah, no... (Score:1, Informative)
Implications on stellar death (Score:2, Interesting)