This Was Such A Pretty Poem That I Had To Reblog :)

This was such a pretty poem that I had to reblog :)

But really, it’s 100% accurate. We are star-stuff.

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

acosmicgeek - A COSMIC GEEK

More Posts from Acosmicgeek and Others

5 years ago
THE LIFE OF A STAR: STAR NURSERIES

THE LIFE OF A STAR: STAR NURSERIES

How did this "star stuff" come to exist? The life of stars is a cycle: a star's birth came from a star's death. When it comes to star birth, the star nebulae reigns supreme.

        A Nebula (take a look at pictures, they're some of the most beautiful things in the universe) is a giant cloud of dust and gas. This is the region where new stars are formed. Nebulae live in the space in between stars and between galaxies - called interstellar space (or the interstellar medium) - and are often formed by dying stars and supernovas (NASA). 

        This cloud of particles and gases is mostly made of hydrogen (remember - stars mostly fuse hydrogen!). These appear as patches of light (emission, reflection, or planetary-types) or a dark region against a brighter background (dark-type). This depends on whether "... it reflects light from nearby stars, emits its own light, or re-emits ultraviolet radiation from nearby stars as visible light. If it absorbs light, the nebula appears as a dark patch ..." (The Free Dictionary). 

        There are four main types of nebulae: emission, reflection, dark, and planetary nebulae.

        Emission nebulae are a high-temperature gathering of particles, of which are energized by a nearby ultra-violent-light-emitting star. These particles release radiation as they fall to lower energy states (for more information on electrons moving to energized states and falling back to lower states, read this). This radiation is red because the spectra/wavelength of photons emitted by hydrogen happens to be shifted to the red-end of the visible light spectrum. There are more particles than hydrogen in the nebulae, but hydrogen is the most abundant.

        Next up is the reflection nebulae - which reflect the light of nearby stars. As opposed to emission nebulae, reflection are blue, because "the size of the dust grains causes blue light to be reflected more efficiently than red light, so these reflection nebulae frequently appear blue in color ...." The Reddening Law of Nebula describes that the interstellar dust which forms nebulae affects shorter wavelength light more than longer-wavelengths (CalTech).

        Then there's the "emo" nebulae: dark nebulae. These are, very simply, nebulae which block light from any nearby sources. The lack of light can cause dark nebulae to be very cold and dark (hence their name), and the heat needed for star formation comes in the form of cosmic rays and gravitational energy as dust gathers. Many stars near dark nebulae emit high levels of infrared light (this type is much more intricate then I've explained, but that summary will do for now. If you're interested in learning more, read this).

        Finally, there are planetary nebulae. And these aren't nebulae made of planets. These nebulae are formed when stars (near the ends of their life) throw out a shell of dust. The result is a small, spherical shape, which looks like a planet (hence their name) (METU).

        Nebulae themselves are essentially formed by gas and dust particles clumping together by the attractive force of gravity. The clumps increase in density until they form areas where the density is great enough to form massive stars. These massive stars emit ultraviolet radiation, which ionizes surrounding gas and causes photon emissions, allowing us to see nebulae (like we discussed in the types of nebulae). Universe Today said, "Even though the interstellar gas is very dispersed, the amount of matter adds up over the vast distances between the stars. And eventually, and with enough gravitational attraction between clouds, this matter can coalesce and collapse to forms stars and planetary systems."

        Britannica notes the structure of nebulae in terms of density and chemical composition: "Various regions exhibit an enormous range of densities and temperatures. Within the Galaxy’s spiral arms about half the mass of the interstellar medium is concentrated in molecular clouds, in which hydrogen occurs in molecular form (H2) and temperatures are as low as 10 kelvins (K). These clouds are inconspicuous optically and are detected principally by their carbon monoxide (CO) emissions in the millimeter wavelength range. Their densities in the regions studied by CO emissions are typically 1,000 H2 molecules per cubic cm. At the other extreme is the gas between the clouds, with a temperature of 10 million K and a density of only 0.001 H+ ion per cubic cm." The composition of nebulae also aligns with what we see with the rest of the universe, mostly being made of hydrogen and the rest being other particles, particularly helium (this matches up with the composition of stars!).

        Fun-fact: supernova can create nebulae, but also destroy them. Possibly the most famous nebulae, the "Pillars of Creation," the Eagle Nebula, is hypothesized to have been destroyed by the shockwave of a supernova 6,000 years ago. Since it takes light 7,000 years to travel from that nebulae to the Earth, we won't know for another 1,000 years (Spitzer). If you're wondering how exactly we could know how far nebulae are, check out this article about a new way to measure that distance using the "surface brightness-radius relation", and other distance measurements (such as the parallax measurement).

        Now, why did I just explain the intricacies of nebulae in 900 words when this series is supposed to be about stars? Well, when we talk about the birth of a star (and the death sometimes, too), nebulae become important. Take note of what we've discussed in this article: formation, chemical composition, and density. It'll be important in our next chapter (and nuclear fusion, but when is that not important?).

First -  Chapter 1: An Introduction

Previous -  Chapter 2: Classification

Next -  Chapter 4: A Star is Born

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!


Tags
4 years ago

Update on The Life of a Star, Chapter 7

So I’m a little over halfway done (I should be ready for some editing on Saturday) with this chapter and I think this might be my one longest yet! My current longest is Chapter 6, with 1,245 words. I’m currently at around 700 words with this one, and I’ve got at least 400 more to go. Anyway, I’m really excited for this one. We’ll be touching on nebulae again, and finally addressing our first ending for a star. 

We’ve only got three more chapters left, plus a possible one for additional topics. I’ll be sad to end this one, but I’m starting to gather ideas for the next book. Maybe on the methods of observing the universe? Maybe on random astrophysics topics? Perhaps one on galaxies? Cosmology? The Four Fundamental Forces? Haven’t decided yet xD

I think you’ll all really like these last chapters I have planned, or at least I hope you do. Thanks for reading :)

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!


Tags
4 years ago

I swear every-time I see the quadratic formula I get the song stuck in my head

During math tests if you listen closely you can hear me mumbling

“oooooh x equals the opposite of b, plus or minus the square root, b squared minus 4ac all divided by 2a!”

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

It Was At This Moment He Knew…….

It was at this moment he knew…….


Tags
4 years ago
image

I'm watching the launch now, half an hour to go!

This is the first NASA astronaut launch since 2011. I wanted to go to Cape Canaveral to watch but instead I'm watching from afar :)

(Edit: they’ve put off the launch till Saturday due to weather)

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!


Tags
4 years ago

This isn’t family friendly but its darn funny xD

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

They Haven’t Figured It Out

They haven’t figured it out


Tags
4 years ago

Okay I know that I love black holes but buddy why don’t you not come here?

I wonder if falling into a black hole would hurt? If I could choose any way to go out, it’d probably be by black holes. Might as well be killed by the love of my life.

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

OJ287 Is One Of The Largest Black Holes In The Known Universe. If It Were Placed At The Center Of Our

OJ287 is one of the largest black holes in the known universe. If it were placed at the center of our solar system, its event horizon would swallow nearly everything is our Sun’s sphere of influence. All the planets, the asteroid belt, and (obviously) us. This beast is an estimated 18 billion solar masses and drifts through the cosmos some.

Image credit: Jaime Trosper/FQTQ


Tags
5 years ago

So I actually did the calculations and the surface area of Jupiter could probably fit around 11,474,491,000,000 football fields.

Okay so I googled it and the radius of Jupiter is 43,441 miles. However, I’m going to convert that into meters, which’ll make that radius a cool 69,911,513 m. Next up I’ll plug that into the surface area of a sphere formula (A= 4πr^2) which will get us approximately 6.14 x 10^16 m^2 (or roughly 61,400,000,000,000,000 m^2).

Next, I found the area of one football field to be around 5,351 m^2. Dividing the surface area of Jupiter by the surface area of one football field, we can find out how many football fields will fit onto the surface of Jupiter. And that is 1.1474491 x 10^13. Calculating that, that will be 11,474,491,000,000 football fields (11 trillion or so). Oh boy.

For comparison’s sake, the universe is estimated to have AT MOST 2 trillion galaxies! Which means that Jupiter likely could fit more football fields than the universe has galaxies. Another example, there are an estimated billion trillion stars in the observable universe. Jupiter’s football fields account for half of the stars in our observable universe.

I actually tried to find out how many football fields were in the U.S. for comparison but I still can’t find a statistic. 

But also that’s pretty hilarious xD

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

No WaY

No WaY


Tags
4 years ago

I mean, that is true. Atoms would really like communism (aside from Noble gases, of course).

Fluorine be like SHARING IS CARING

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

Hydrogen Bond Vibes

Hydrogen bond vibes


Tags
4 years ago

I love Schrodinger’s Cat memes

I might write something on quantum mechanics in the future, so I’ll probably dedicate an entire chapter to this cat. Maybe with a week’s worth of SC memes? Who knows!

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

Erwin Doesn’t Like That.

Erwin doesn’t like that.


Tags
5 years ago

Goregous :O

WANT MORE? GET YOUR HEAD STUCK IN THE STARS AT MY BLOG!

Comet Swan

Comet Swan


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • ace0390
    ace0390 reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • lady-cyn
    lady-cyn reblogged this · 3 months ago
  • 2-amar
    2-amar liked this · 1 year ago
  • louisgirlwinx
    louisgirlwinx liked this · 1 year ago
  • catiaadao
    catiaadao liked this · 1 year ago
  • randomotherkin
    randomotherkin reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • misterazul55
    misterazul55 reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • misterazul55
    misterazul55 liked this · 1 year ago
  • cognitivecapricorn
    cognitivecapricorn reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • ace0390
    ace0390 reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • sevendevilsinwesteros
    sevendevilsinwesteros liked this · 1 year ago
  • xoxo-amber-jo
    xoxo-amber-jo reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • useyourcoco
    useyourcoco reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • useyourcoco
    useyourcoco liked this · 1 year ago
  • deeelusional
    deeelusional reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • thelastjedi1
    thelastjedi1 reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • snvffblade
    snvffblade liked this · 1 year ago
  • chleopatrah
    chleopatrah reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • hxneybeekind444x
    hxneybeekind444x reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • hypnicj3rk
    hypnicj3rk liked this · 1 year ago
  • paradox-of-pisces
    paradox-of-pisces reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • sweet-honey-bee11
    sweet-honey-bee11 liked this · 1 year ago
  • inevitablewinter
    inevitablewinter liked this · 1 year ago
  • burntundertones
    burntundertones liked this · 1 year ago
  • dogsandotherphilosophers
    dogsandotherphilosophers liked this · 1 year ago
  • aanotheruniverse
    aanotheruniverse reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • aanotheruniverse
    aanotheruniverse liked this · 1 year ago
  • toxicslud
    toxicslud reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • soberdoll
    soberdoll reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • highlittlewraith
    highlittlewraith reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • littlemiss-stardust
    littlemiss-stardust liked this · 1 year ago
  • littlemiss-stardust
    littlemiss-stardust reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • unintentionallyshallow
    unintentionallyshallow reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • hellaamelanin
    hellaamelanin liked this · 1 year ago
  • silent-figure
    silent-figure liked this · 1 year ago
acosmicgeek - A COSMIC GEEK
A COSMIC GEEK

Get your head stuck in the stars.

101 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags