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A simple Chart |
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| Apr21-04, 11:11 AM | #1 |
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A simple Chart
Seems that not much gets posted here lately. The link is to a simple chart that answers (in advance) some of the questions asked here. Note in particular the abundance label at the bottom of each class, with M Class stars being 80% !
See how few of the biggies (Class O, B and A) are either (1) left from original formation or (2) forming in current H2 clouds of starbirth. That same,short lifespan carries down to the very small abundance of the Supergiants. http://anzwers.org/free/universe/startype.html |
| Apr21-04, 11:32 AM | #2 |
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LABGUY.
See how few of the biggies (Class O, B and A) are either (1) left from original formation or (2) forming in current H2 clouds of starbirth. That same,short lifespan carries down to the very small abundance of the Supergiants. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- the class o stars seem more of an oddity, only 15 known? what is the secret to these survivors? |
| Apr21-04, 12:09 PM | #3 |
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| Apr21-04, 12:40 PM | #4 |
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A simple Chart
i think i worded that badly LABGUY, i meant is it the short life span or
the rarity of these stars forming that is the reason only 15 have been observed |
| Apr21-04, 01:19 PM | #5 |
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lets say that in our galaxy (the part we can see, not obscured by dust etc) these biggies form at the rate of X per year so if they lasted 10 years then on average we would see 10X in the sky. (that is easy to check, if X = 1 that is if one formed per year, and it lasted ten years, then we would see around 10 in the sky at any one time) And if X form per year and they last ten million (10^7) years then we would see 10^7 X in the sky and in fact we see 15 of them therefore X = 15 divided by ten million = 1.5 x 10^-6 that is the rate they form in the Milkyway Galaxy 0.0000015 per year one of those suckers forms every 2/3 of a million years so in a billion years only 1500 of them would form, in the whole galaxy so from this arithmetic I want to get a sense of how to explain the rarity and I have to say BOTH reasons because not only does one of those things have a lifetime that is only a thousandth of the Sun's (say 10 billion years) but they also form extremely rarely, only 1500 in a galaxy in a billion years. ---------- this discussion is simplified because we can probably see these things in neighbor galaxies and I was assuming all 15 are in Milkyway but it is just a rough calculation anyway |
| Apr21-04, 01:33 PM | #6 |
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wow, the pure, blue diamond of the heavens.
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| Apr21-04, 02:17 PM | #7 |
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blue is right
Labguy's table says O type surface is 6 or 7 times hotter than sun so the mix of wavelengths will be 6 or 7 times shorter that is a lot of UV as well as blue since we may have Labguy's attention let's keep asking questions (he knows lots of answers) I have been interested by the fact that there seems to be an upper limit on the size of stars O-types are only about 10 times size of sun in diameter I dont know the mass ratio but probably O-types never get more than 100 times solar mass why should there be this limit? why cannot nature put together a star bigger than that, in situations where conditions accidentally happen to be right for it? I think I read somewhere that the upper bound on size of star which can condense out of dust and gas is because of the LIGHT PRESSURE which tends to drive the condensing star apart if you try to make too big a star, then its own light pushes it apart so it cant fall together and be born Labguy will know if this is the correct explanation or not Labguy? |
| Apr21-04, 03:17 PM | #8 |
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with all the action just pre BB its almost as if our U
was pre ordained, "im an athiest",but how many possible outcomes could materialise out of that mayhem? why an upper mass for stars, planets, why did only 0.5% matter evolve into "solid bodies", if the BB was more damp squid, why not several super super massive stars? |
| Apr21-04, 04:09 PM | #9 |
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http://praxis.pha.jhu.edu/astro2/ast...nce/nolan.html and: http://resource2.ca.jhu.edu/pipermai...ry/000070.html Same pages explain what Marcus said. |
| Apr21-04, 06:13 PM | #10 |
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i am an atheist too but it does look at least a little bit planned (conditions for life almost seem contrived, when looked at in a certain light) i try not to think about this since for me at least it tends to be a waste of time, but i must acknowledge there are real and deep questions people can ask in that department |
| Apr21-04, 07:33 PM | #11 |
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ALways remember that evolution is a soulless process that with enough time can produce the illusion of purpose and design.
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| Apr22-04, 03:14 AM | #12 |
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SELFADJOINT
ALways remember that evolution is a soulless process that with enough time can produce the illusion of purpose and design. ---------------------------------------------------- i agree, but 500MYs ish, is not a long time when you consider the age of our earth. our U did seem to sort itself out quickly. |
| Apr22-04, 08:54 AM | #13 |
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But in the unknown time before our U initiated, we can suppose time enough to evolve. At least we are not limited to the age of the universe. Your statement is like saying 250 ky is not enough time for humans to evolve, when that's the time they have existed as a species.
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