Today Phil’s explaining the stars and how they can be categorized using …
Today Phil’s explaining the stars and how they can be categorized using their spectra. Together with their distance, this provides a wealth of information about them including their luminosity, size, and temperature. The HR diagram plots stars’ luminosity versus temperature and most stars fall along the main sequence, where they live most of their lives.
Chapters: Introduction: Stars Stellar Spectra Star Classifications Why Are There No Green Stars? Luminosity Depends on Size and Temperature The HR Diagram Main Sequence Stars Other Stars on the HR Diagram Review
Phil takes us for a closer (eye safe!) look at the two-octillion …
Phil takes us for a closer (eye safe!) look at the two-octillion ton star that rules our solar system. We look at the sun's core, plasma, magnetic fields, sunspots, solar flares, coronal mass ejections, and what all of that means for our planet.
Chapters: Introduction: Our Sun The Sun's Core Convection Photosphere The Corona & Solar Wind How long does it take for light to reach the Sun's surface? Plasma & The Sun's Magnetic Fields Sunspots & Faculae Solar Flares & Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) The Earth & Solar Eruptions Review
Today Phil explains how telescopes work and offers up some astronomical shopping …
Today Phil explains how telescopes work and offers up some astronomical shopping advice.
Chapters: Introduction How do Telescopes Work? Refraction Magnification Resolution Reflectors What Kind of Telescope Should You Buy? Technology and the Light Spectrum Review
Today Phil explores the world of tides! What is the relationship between …
Today Phil explores the world of tides! What is the relationship between tides and gravity? How do planets and their moons become tidally locked? What would happen if you were 300km tall? Important questions.
Chapters: Introduction Gravity Over Distance Tidal Force Parameters Battle of the Bulges High and Low Tides Push & Pull Tidal Lock Sun Tides Review
Today we’re rounding out our planetary tour with ice giants Uranus and …
Today we’re rounding out our planetary tour with ice giants Uranus and Neptune. Both have small rocky cores, thick mantles of ammonia, water, and methane, and atmospheres that make them look greenish and blue. Uranus has a truly weird rotation and relatively dull weather, while Neptune has clouds and storms whipped by tremendous winds. Both have rings and moons, with Neptune’s Triton probably being a captured iceball that has active geology.
Chapters: Introduction: Uranus Uranus's Structure Uranus's Atmosphere Uranus's Weird Tilt Uranus's Moons Uranus's Rings Neptune's Structure Neptune's Atmosphere Neptune's Magnetic Field & Rings Triton: Neptune's Largest Moon The Discovery of Neptune Review
Venus is a gorgeous naked-eye planet, hanging like a diamond in the …
Venus is a gorgeous naked-eye planet, hanging like a diamond in the twilight -- but its beauty is best looked at from afar. Even though Mercury is closer to the sun, Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system, due to a runaway greenhouse effect, and has the most volcanic activity in the solar system. Its north and south poles were flipped, causing it to rotate backward and making for very strange days on this beautiful but inhospitable world.
Chapters: Introduction: Venus Venus's Phases Transit of Venus Venus's Atmosphere How did Venus get so hot? Venus's Slow Rotation & Retrograde Motion Venus's Spherical Structure Venus's Surface Volcanic Activity on Venus Review
Today Phil follows up last week’s look at the death of low …
Today Phil follows up last week’s look at the death of low mass stars with what comes next: a white dwarf. White dwarfs are incredibly hot and dense objects roughly the size of Earth. They also can form planetary nebulae: huge, intricately detailed objects created when the wind blown from the dying stars is lit up by the central white dwarf. They only last a few millennia. The Sun probably won’t form one, but higher mass stars do.
Chapters: Introduction White Dwarfs Planetary Nebulae How Do Planetary Nebulae Get Their Shape? Structure and Color of Planetary Nebulae Will the Sun Become a Planetary Nebula? Review
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