
Starts With A Bang #129 - Triton and the outer solar system
May 9, 2026 - 01:35:37
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When it comes to stars, most of them, for most of their lives, behave in a very similar fashion to the Sun. In their cores, they undergo nuclear fusion, which provides energy and creates radiation, and that outward radia...
Starts With A Bang podcast #113 - Weird stars is an episode from Starts With A Bang podcast by Ethan Siegel. When it comes to stars, most of them, for most of their lives, behave in a very similar fashion to the Sun. In their cores, they un...
This episode belongs to Starts With A Bang podcast.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jan 11, 2025, 01:37:20 long, audio available.
When it comes to stars, most of them, for most of their lives, behave in a very similar fashion to the Sun. In their cores, they undergo nuclear fusion, which provides energy and creates radiation, and that outward radiation pressure holds the star up, internally, against gravitational collapse. For most stars, this balance between the pressure from outward radiation and the inward force from gravitation is nearly perfect all throughout the star, leading to an equilibrium state. But some stars aren't in this kind of equilibrium at all. Instead, some internal process actually drives the star in a fashion that causes it to pulsate: overshooting equilibrium in both directions, as it alternatingly expands and cools, and then contracts and heat up in a cyclical fashion. These species of intrinsic variable stars, including Cepheids and RR Lyrae stars, are not only of profound importance when it comes to understanding stellar evolution, but for unlocking the secrets of the distant Universe. How do we understand these stars today, where are the frontiers, and what do we hope to learn about them in the coming years and decades? Especially as we transition into the era of "big data" in astronomy, where we aren't observing individual stars in detail but rather thousands upon thousands of similar stars all at once, the answers to these questions are rapidly changing. I'm so pleased to share the first episode of 2025 with you, featuring our guest, Ph.D. candidate Catherine Slaughter, who takes us through all this and more. It's a fascinating look into stellar physics, with possible implications for our own Sun's fate, that you won't want to miss! (The featured image shows the star RR Lyrae, as imaged by the digitized sky survey back at the turn of the century, using data from the Palomar and UK Schmidt telescopes. Credit : Digitized Sky Survey - STScI/NASA)
You can listen to Starts With A Bang podcast #113 - Weird stars online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Starts With A Bang podcast #113 - Weird stars is an episode from Starts With A Bang podcast by Ethan Siegel.
This episode is 01:37:20 long.
This episode was published on Jan 11, 2025.
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Starts With A Bang podcast #113 - Weird stars is from Starts With A Bang podcast by Ethan Siegel.
Published Jan 11, 2025 and 01:37:20 long