Questions tagged [astrophysics]

The application of physical theory to celestial systems such as stars, planets, galaxies, supernovae, and black holes. Astrophysics proper is concerned with explaining phenomena more so than making observations, the latter falling under the purview of astronomy.

Astrophysics is the application of physical theories to celestial systems, in order both to make predictions about the systems and to test the theories themselves. Such systems include but are not limited to

Often astrophysics pushes theories developed with terrestrial laboratory data into regimes that are difficult if not impossible to create on Earth, providing a way of testing how far such theories can be extended. Conversely, it uses principles learned in more familiar settings to describe and predict how exotic systems will interact and evolve, providing the only window into the behavior of phenomena located too far away to influence in controlled experiments.

Because of the physical vastness of the observable universe, together with the compositional diversity of its contents, astrophysics draws on and spurs development in many other fields of physics, from to , from to and , from to .

In contrast to the more observationally-oriented field of , is concerned more with applying and testing theories. It is less about what the contents of the universe are and more about explaining the phenomena we do observe, providing physical mechanisms for how celestial systems work as we observe. When such investigation involves the "big questions" regarding the properties, origin, and development of the universe as a whole, the pursuit becomes known as .

At its core, astrophysics contains the ideal that the same physics seen on Earth applies to the rest of the universe, and so it is the link that extends our understanding of nature to the most distant and exotic of phenomena.

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What would be the maximum stable mass of an artificially created sphere of very cold, very pure hydrogen-1?

The Chandrasekhar limit assumes the white dwarf is made of carbon, but hydrogen has a much lower ratio of mass to electrons, so the limit should be different in that case. And electron degeneracy pressure might not even be the limiting factor, if…
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Why do heavier elements radiate heat more efficiently than hydrogen and helium?

In astrophysics elements heavier than helium are termed “metals” collectively. These elements are more opaque and radiate more efficiently than hydrogen and helium. As a result, metallicity has a profound effect on stellar evolution. For example,…
哲煜黄
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Star Surface Temperature Vs. Mass

I am hoping that someone can clarify this for me. With these equations. (Boltzmann Law) and radius of Radius of star how does surface temp scale with mass $R _x \approx R_\bigodot (\frac{M_x}{M_\bigodot})^.5$ $L _x \approx L_\bigodot…
Kartik
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Do the stars imaged by a telescope even exist at present?

I know that we now have telescopes which can capture the images of the stars and galaxies millions of light-years away from us. Does the telescope capture the past image of the star, i.e. the light which it emitted centuries ago? What guarantee is…
Ajit
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Minimum number of atoms in star

I am trying to follow a derivation on this site to derive the minimum number of (hydrogen) atoms I need so that the gravitational force dominates over internal electrostatic forces. The derivation begins by introducing the ratio of the two forces…
Lagerbaer
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Does the lunar orbital plane precess?

I read that the lunar orbit undergoes apsidal precession in which the major axis of the elliptic orbit shifts. Does the lunar orbital plane precess as well?
Lelouch
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When and How far out will the Voyager twins come to a full-stop?

So space is mostly, but not entirely, empty. Every few (dunno the order) cubic metres of space there is some cosmic dust. Assuming that Cosmic dust exerts some friction on passing bodies, The Voyager twins are merely coasting along and Not…
Everyone
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The Galactic Plane

I'm guessing this isn't a great physics question, but I just can't find an answer with Google. If the galactic plane is perfectly horizontal at what angle and rotation will the ecliptic plane of our Solar System be?
Jonathan.
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Degree of ionization and Saha equation

Say you want to calculate degree of ionization for different gases in atmosphere of a star with abundances similar to those in Sun (let's assume you only have hydrogen, helium and sodium) over the temperature range (from 2000 K to 45000 K for…
Ivana
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Total radiation flux from a star

I'm looking around the net to find good resources on how to compute total radiation flux from a given star at a given orbiting distance. Ideally I'd like to get not just the $W/m^2$ of the star, but also the expected high-energy particles, EM,…
Radu094
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Temperature Measurement Of Interstellar Matter

Have read many articles about the temperature of interstellar gas/dust/plasma. Recently, Voyage2 departed the heliosphere. According to a paper this article below, "In one of the papers, the researchers suggest that the interstellar medium near…
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Why is NASA interested in Gamma ray bursts?

Gamma-ray bursts(GRBs) are flashes of gamma rays associated with extremely energetic explosions why nasa interested to Gamma ray burst?
gamma
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The source of the light we see from the Sun

Is it true that the visible light we see from the Sun comes from the electron-electron shell changes from the element iron as they absorb and emit energy in the form of photons. This energy derived from the fusion reaction? Is this process…
R. Karr
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What's going on with SDO images of the Sun?

I'm not a physics buff but I do have an Astrophysics question regarding our Sun. For the last week now the SDO telescope has been showing portions of the Sun going dark, at first it was in the UV and higher frequencies until today when more then…
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Cepheid variable light curves

Basically, given a set of noisy observations for the apparent magnitude of a Cepheid variable, how is this fit to a curve which allows the period, and therefore distance, to be found? Cepheids' luminosity isn't sinusoidal. My first though was to use…
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