UNIVERSITY PHYSICS UCI PKG
UNIVERSITY PHYSICS UCI PKG
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781323575208
Author: YOUNG
Publisher: PEARSON C
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Chapter 37, Problem 37.68CP

CP Determining the Masses of Stars. Many of the stars in the sky are actually binary stars, in which two stars orbit about their common center of mass. If the orbital speeds of the stars are high enough, the motion of the stars can be detected by the Doppler shifts of the light they emit. Stars for which this is the case are called spectroscopic binary stars. Figure P37.68 shows the simplest case of a spectroscopic binary star: two identical stars, each with mass m. orbiting their center of mass in a circle of radius R. The plane of the stars orbits is edge-on to the line of sight of an observer on the earth, (a) The light produced by heated hydrogen gas in a laboratory on the earth has a frequency of 4.568110 × 1014 Hz. In the light received from the stars by a telescope on the earth, hydrogen light is observed to vary in frequency between 4.567710 × 1014 Hz and 4.568910 × 10 Hz. Determine whether the binary star system as a whole is moving toward or away from the earth, the speed of this motion, and the orbital speeds of the stars. (Hint: The speeds involved are much less than c, so you may use the approximate result Δf/f = u/c given in Section 37.6.) (b) The light from each star in the binary system varies from its maximum frequency to its minimum frequency and back again in 11.0 days. Determine the orbital radius R and the mass m of each star. Give your answer for m in kilograms and as a multiple of the mass of the sun. 1.99 × 10 kg. Compare the value of R to the distance from the earth to the sun. 1.50 × 1011 m. (This technique is actually used in astronomy to determine the masses of stars. In practice, the problem is more complicated because the two stars in a binary system are usually not identical, the orbits are usually not circular, and the plane of the orbits is usually tilted with respect to the line of sight from the earth.)

Figure P37.68

Chapter 37, Problem 37.68CP, CP Determining the Masses of Stars. Many of the stars in the sky are actually binary stars, in which

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Quasars are faint, distant sources of radio waves. (Quasar is short for "quasi-stellar source." They are so named because, like a star, they appear to the astronomer to be pointlike.) From the shift in the frequency of their emitted light toward the red, called the "redshift," we know that quasars are moving very fast. Astronomers observe that the more distant an object is from the earth, the faster it moves. In this way they determine that quasars are billions of light years from earth. To be visible at this great distance, quasars must have enormous luminosity. Typically a quasar radiates energy at a rate on the order of 1040 W, roughly 1014 times greater than the sun or 40 times greater than the most luminous galaxy. At what rate is rest mass being consumed to produce this much radiation? Quasar 3C-273
Quasars are faint, distant sources of radio waves. (Quasar is short for "quasi-stellar source." They are so named because, like a star, they appear to the astronomer to be pointlike.) From the shift in the frequency of their emitted light toward the red, called the "redshift," we know that quasars are moving very fast. Astronomers observe that the more distant an object is from the earth, the faster it moves. In this way they determine that quasars are billions of light years from earth. To be visible at this great distance, quasars must have enormous luminosity. Typically a quasar radiates energy at a rate on the order of 1040 W, roughly 1014 times greater than the sun or 40 times greater than the most luminous galaxy. At what rate is rest mass being consumed to produce this much radiation?
A galaxy G is moving away radially with speed with respect to an observer O. The relation between X, the wavelength of light emitted at G, and λo, the wavelength observed at O, is 入。 λ = λe λε 1+B 1- B' = where ẞ v/c (c is the speed of light). For ẞ < 1 find a power series expansion of the above formula up to and including terms of order ẞ³.

Chapter 37 Solutions

UNIVERSITY PHYSICS UCI PKG

Ch. 37 - A spaceship is traveling toward the earth from the...Ch. 37 - The average life span in the United States is...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.6DQCh. 37 - Two events occur at the same space point in a...Ch. 37 - A high-speed train passes a train platform. Larry...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.9DQCh. 37 - A student asserts that a material particle must...Ch. 37 - The speed of light relative to still water is 2.25...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.12DQCh. 37 - Prob. 37.13DQCh. 37 - Why do you think the development of Newtonian...Ch. 37 - What do you think would be different in everyday...Ch. 37 - Suppose the two lightning bolts shown in Fig....Ch. 37 - The positive muon (), an unstable particle, lives...Ch. 37 - How fast must a rocket travel relative to the...Ch. 37 - A spaceship flies past Mars with a speed of 0.985c...Ch. 37 - The negative pion () is an unstable particle with...Ch. 37 - As you pilot your space utility vehicle at a...Ch. 37 - A spacecraft flies away from the earth with a...Ch. 37 - An alien spacecraft is flying overhead at a great...Ch. 37 - A spacecraft of the Trade Federation rites past...Ch. 37 - A meter stick moves past you at great speed. Its...Ch. 37 - Why Are We Bombarded by Muons? Muons are unstable...Ch. 37 - An unstable particle is created in the upper...Ch. 37 - As measured by an observer on the earth, a...Ch. 37 - A rocket ship flies past the earth at 91.0% of the...Ch. 37 - An observer in frame S is moving to the right...Ch. 37 - Space pilot Mavis zips past Stanley at a constant...Ch. 37 - A pursuit spacecraft from the planet Tatooine is...Ch. 37 - An enemy spaceship is moving toward your...Ch. 37 - Two particles are created in a high-energy...Ch. 37 - Two particles in a high-energy accelerator...Ch. 37 - Two particles in a high-energy accelerator...Ch. 37 - An imperial spaceship, moving at high speed...Ch. 37 - Tell It to the Judge. (a) How fast must you be...Ch. 37 - Electromagnetic radiation from a star is observed...Ch. 37 - A source of electromagnetic radiation is moving in...Ch. 37 - Relativistic Baseball. Calculate the magnitude of...Ch. 37 - A proton has momentum with magnitude p0 when its...Ch. 37 - When Should You Use Relativity? As you have seen,...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.29ECh. 37 - An electron is acted upon by a force of 5.00 1015...Ch. 37 - What is the speed of a particle whose kinetic...Ch. 37 - If a muon is traveling at 0.999c, what are its...Ch. 37 - A proton (rest mass 1.67 1027 kg) has total...Ch. 37 - (a) How much work must be done on a particle with...Ch. 37 - An Antimatter Reactor. When a particle meets its...Ch. 37 - Electrons are accelerated through a potential...Ch. 37 - A particle has rest mass 6.64 1027 kg and...Ch. 37 - Creating a Particle. Two protons (each with rest...Ch. 37 - Compute the kinetic energy of a proton (mass 1.67 ...Ch. 37 - What is the kinetic energy of a proton moving at...Ch. 37 - (a) Through what potential difference does an...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.42ECh. 37 - After being produced in a collision between...Ch. 37 - Inside a spaceship flying past the earth at...Ch. 37 - The starships of the Solar Federation are marked...Ch. 37 - A cube of metal with sides of length a sits at...Ch. 37 - A space probe is sent to the vicinity of the star...Ch. 37 - A muon is created 55.0 km above the surface of the...Ch. 37 - The Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Physicists and...Ch. 37 - The net force F on a particle of mass m is...Ch. 37 - Everyday Time Dilation. Two atomic clocks are...Ch. 37 - The distance to a particular star, as measured in...Ch. 37 - CP erenkov Radiation. The Russian physicist P A....Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.54PCh. 37 - CP A nuclear bomb containing 12.0 kg of plutonium...Ch. 37 - In the earths rest frame, two protons are moving...Ch. 37 - In certain radioactive beta decay processes, the...Ch. 37 - Two events are observed in a frame of reference S...Ch. 37 - One of the wavelengths of light emitted by...Ch. 37 - Albert in Wonderland. Einstein and Lorentz, being...Ch. 37 - Measuring Speed by Radar. A baseball coach uses a...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.62PCh. 37 - CP In a particle accelerator a proton moves with...Ch. 37 - CP The French physicist Armand Fizeau was the...Ch. 37 - DATA As a research scientist at a linear...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.66PCh. 37 - DATA You are a scientist studying small aerosol...Ch. 37 - CP Determining the Masses of Stars. Many of the...Ch. 37 - CP Kaon Production. In high-energy physics, new...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.70CPCh. 37 - An airplane has a length of 60 m when measured at...Ch. 37 - If the airplane of Passage Problem 37.71 has a...Ch. 37 - In our universe, the rest energy of an electron is...Ch. 37 - In the alternate universe, how fast must an object...
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Time Dilation - Einstein's Theory Of Relativity Explained!; Author: Science ABC;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yuD34tEpRFw;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY