AQA A-Level Physics/Spectral Classes
Key Definitions
[edit | edit source]Balmer Series: A set of lines in the Hydrogen Spectrum
Spectral Classes
[edit | edit source]Stars can be classified into spectral classes based on their temperature and the absorption spectra that they produce. The following table summarises the properties of each class and was taken directly from the AQA specification.
Spectral Class | Colour | Temperature /K | Prominent Absorption Lines |
---|---|---|---|
O | blue | 25,000 - 50,000 | He+, He, H |
B | blue | 11,000 - 25,000 | He, H |
A | blue-white | 7500 - 11000 | H, ionized metals |
F | white | 6000 - 7500 | Ionized metals |
G | yellow-white | 5000 - 6000 | Ionized and neutral metals |
K | orange | 3500 - 5000 | Neutral metals |
M | red | < 3500 | Neutral atoms, TiO (titanium dioxide) |
Hydrogen Balmer Lines
[edit | edit source]Different elements in stars absorb different wavelengths of light. For example, if white light was shone through a cloud of pure hydrogen, all light would make it through except a few particular wavelengths. This is because the hydrogen has absorbed it, subsequently exciting the electrons around the hydrogen atoms.
The same effect occurs in stars. Each element in the star absorbs certain wavelengths of light, resulting in an absorption spectrum to a viewer one earth.It would look something similar to Figure 1, just with black bands over the absorbed wavelengths.
Hydrogen Balmer lines are a series of lines in the Hydrogen spectrum. By analysing these lines, we can narrow down our estimate of the temperature of the star. These lines only occur at a certain temperature, when the electrons of the hydrogen are in the state.
When star temperature is too hot:
[edit | edit source]Going back to our hydrogen cloud example, if the cloud was too hot, the hydrogen atoms would collide with each other with enough force to free their electrons. When an atom loses electrons, it becomes ionized, so the result of this is an ionized cloud of hydrogen. Due to the lack of electrons, no white light can be absorbed, so the hydrogen balmer lines are not visible; no light is being absorbed.
In this instance, the electrons are of course not in the level, as they're not even part of the atom at all.
When star temperature is too cold:
[edit | edit source]If the cloud were too cold, the light incident on the hydrogen atoms would not have enough energy to excite the electrons, meaning it would not be absorbed. For a cloud of pure hydrogen, this would give exactly the same effect as if the cloud were ionized.
Is the star too hot or too cold?
[edit | edit source]Given that the star being too hot or too cold have exactly the same effect to an oberver on earth looking at balmier lines, how can we tell what the temperature of the star is.
Fortunately, a star contains many elements, which all have different absorption patterns. We can analyse multiple elements to more accurately determine the temperature of the star.
We know that the strongest balmer lines occur in a star of approximately 9000K. As the temperature of the star gets closer to 9000K, the hydrogen balmer lines get stronger. As a result, we can use the intensity of the balmer lines to estimate a stars temperature.