nebulas, stars, pulsars, and quasars

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Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars. By: C'arah Aiken Michaela Martinez & Breanna Dawson. Nebulas. Nebulas are made up of gas left behind by stars forming or exploding There are different classes of Nebulas - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars
Page 2: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

Nebulas are made up of gas left behind by stars forming or exploding

There are different classes of Nebulas The classes are: Reflection Nebulae, Emission Nebulae, Dark Nebulae, Planetary Nebulae, Supernova Nebulae

The word nebula comes from Ancient Roman and European times when Latin was the main language in the western world, and was used to describe most scientific terms

Page 3: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

In Latin, the word nebula means a cloud, or a mist, or a vapor

Nebulae is the plural of Nebula

Nebulae come in many different shapes and sizes

Emission nebulae are clouds of high temperature gas

Life couldn’t exist on a Nebula because it’s a cloud

Nebulae are part of a stars formation, it’s how they are born

Page 4: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars
Page 5: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

The Cat’s Eye

Nebula is three

thousand light

years away from

Earth Charles Messier was the first to discover a nebula

He was originally looking for comets but he found a few smudges of color in the sky

William Herschel discovered the first nebula ever, it was a Crab Nebula

Crab Nebula

Page 6: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars
Page 7: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

stars are hot balls of hydrogen and helium, with nuclear fusion at their core

They can live billions and even trillions of years, consuming their hydrogen fuel

But ancient peoples had no idea what they were

stars played a part in most religious ceremonies, and navigators used them to travel at night, over land and the sea

Page 8: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

The sun is the closest star to Earth

It’s located about 150 million km away

The distances to stars in space is huge

Even the closest stars would take thousands of human lifetimes to reach

Page 9: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

The smallest stars out there are the tiny red dwarfs

Red Dwarf stars have 7.5% the mass of the Sun

The color of the star depends on the temperature

The coolest stars are red and the hottest colors are blue

Types of stars: red dwarfs, brown dwarfs, super giants, neutron stars, and wolf rayet stars

Page 10: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

there is no way that there could be life on a star because stars are hot bodies of glowing gas.

If someone decided to try to go to a star they wouldn’t be able to step foot on it like the moon because it is hot and made up of gas

Page 11: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

PulsarsPulsars

diagram of a pulsar showing its rotation axis, its magnetic axis, and its magnetic field

A pulsar is a neutron star that emits beams of radiation that sweep through Earth's line of sight

Pulsars seem to pulse from our view because the rotation of the neutron star causes the beam of radiation generated within the magnetic field to sweep in and out of our line of sight with a regular period

Page 12: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

Pulsars were discovered by Jocelyn Bell at Cambridge University in 1976

A pulsar is a very dense, rapidly spinning, and electro-magnetic radiation emitting neutron star

Scientist still don’t know what makes pulsars spin so rapidly

A pulsar usually has a radius of 8-16 kilometers but has a very great gravitational pull because of it’s density

You aren’t able to live on a pulsar or step onto one

Page 13: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

What a Pulsar is made up of

Page 14: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

The closest Pulsar to the Earth is 200 kilometers away

Pulsars usually die based on the size of it

There are three different types of pulsar: rotation- powered pulsar, accretion-powered pulsar, and magnetars

Besides being a neutron star, it has small size, solar mass of material, mostly neutrons, large density like an atomic nucleus, strong magnetic field, and fast rotation, pulsars slow in their rotation rates as they age

Page 15: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

The sphere in the middle represents the neutron star, the curves indicates the magnetic field lines and the protruding cones represent the emission beams

Page 16: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

Quasars are extremely bright masses of energy and light

The name quasar is actually short for quasi-stellar radio source or quasi-stellar object

Quasars are the brightest objects in our universe, although to see one through a telescope they do not look that bright at all

Quasars are extremely distant and are the farthest from our galaxy

They emit radio waves, x-rays, and light waves

Page 17: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

Quasars appear as faint red stars to us

A quasar is believed to be a super massive black hole surrounded by an accretion disk

An accretion disk is a flat, disk like formation of gas that rapidly spirals around a larger object, like a black hole, a new star, or a white dwarf

It is very hard to be able to tell the size and density of a quasar because of how great its gravity pull is

Page 18: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

Quasars are generally considered to be 10 to 12 billion light years away

First quasar to ever be discovered was the EC- 273

But, the closest Quasar is PKS-2349 which is only about 1500 million light years away from Earth

Quasars can live for a very long time scientists say that quasars that were discovered around 35 years ago are still there

Page 19: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

PKS-2349 Quasar

Page 20: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

Some physical characteristics of a Quasar is: star like object identified with a radio source, changeable light, large change of radiation, wide emission, and large red shifts

It is impossible to live on a Quasar because it is to bright where you could go blind

Page 21: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars

• Nebulas are made up of gas left behind by stars forming or exploding• stars are hot balls of hydrogen and helium, with nuclear fusion at their core• A pulsar is a neutron star that emits beams of radiation that sweep through Earth's line of sight• Quasars are extremely bright masses of energy and light• The name quasar is actually short for quasi-stellar radio source or quasi-stellar object• The smallest stars out there are the tiny red dwarfs

Page 22: Nebulas, Stars, Pulsars, and Quasars