Universe: Stars And Galaxies
Universe: Stars And Galaxies
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781319115098
Author: Roger Freedman, Robert Geller, William J. Kaufmann
Publisher: W. H. Freeman
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Chapter 20, Problem 33Q
To determine

Better names for brown dwarfs, red dwarfs and white dwarfs and the way these alternative names describe the objects’ properties accurately.

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Use the H-R Diagram below to help answer the following questions. Luminosity (solar units) 10,000+ 1,000+ 100+ 10- .01+ .001+ .0001 B White Dwarfs 20,000 B Spectral Type A Main Sequence D 10,000 Temperature (K) FGK Red Giants 5,000 M -5 10 15 Absolute Magnitude
Globular clusters contain no stars more massive than the Sun. Which of the following seems like the least reasonable implication of this observation? Group of answer choices   Globular clusters are very old.   Globular clusters are very young.   Only the low-mass stars are still "alive" in the clusters.   Many red giants can probably be found in globular clusters.   The very massive stars in the globular clusters have already burnt out.
Which of the following is least reasonable regarding novae and supernovae? Group of answer choices   A type I (carbon-detonation) supernova results when a white dwarf in a binary system absorbs enough mass from its companion to push it over the Chandrasekhar limit.   A type II supernova results from any supermassive star at the end of its life, when it runs out of fusion energy and collapses.   A nova can occur multiple times in a binary system.   If a white dwarf in a binary system absorbs enough mass to go beyond the Chandrasekhar limit, the white dwarf explodes as a supernova.   The reason a type I supernova does not produce hydrogen lines is that the explosion originates from a stellar core (white dwarf), where hydrogen has already fused to produce heavier elements (so there is no longer any hydrogen).   More supernovae are observed in the Milky Way because they are much closer to us than those in other galaxies.
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