21st Century Astronomy
21st Century Astronomy
6th Edition
ISBN: 9780393428063
Author: Kay
Publisher: NORTON
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Chapter 15, Problem 14QP
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3.   Brown dwarfs are ____.  a.  stars with a very thick dust sphere around them, so they appear “brown”  b.  low mass M type stars with hundreds of planets   c.  an anomaly because they are extremely small but have relatively high temperature   d.  protostars that could not ignite the fusion of hydrogen at their core  e.  has a surface temperature of 2500 K by fusing hydrogen I asked this question onece already, but the answer I got said the answer was C because "AT 2700K THEY ARE HOT" or something to that effect. I tried to find a way to reply to that thread. My argument was that even if brown dwarfs were 2700k (and my book says that's closer to the temperature of red dwarfs and that brown dwarfs are usually around 1000K). Seeing that we are studying the life cycle and evolution of all stars, wouldn't either of those temperatures be on the relatively COOL side of all star temperatures? Wouldn't the most appropriate answer be D.?
As a white dwarf cools, its radius will not change because   a. pressure resulting from nuclear reactions in a shell just below the surface keeps it from collapsing.   b. pressure does not depend on temperature for a white dwarf because the electrons are degenerate.   c. pressure does not depend on temperature because the white dwarf is too hot.   d. pressure does not depend on temperature because the star has exhausted all its nuclear fuels.   e. material accreting onto it from a companion maintains a constant radius.
Which of the following binary star systems cannot exist? A. A 1 solar-mass main sequence star and a 4 solar mass red giant with a size 100 times smaller than the orbital distance. B. A 15 solar-mass main sequence star and a 10 solar mass red giant with a size 100 times smaller than the orbital distance. C. A 1 solar-mass main sequence star and a 4 solar-mass main sequence star. D. A 2 solar-mass main sequence star and a 1 solar mass red giant with a size a few times smaller than the orbital distance.
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