Stellar statistics
Some of the most important generalizations concerning the nature and evolution of stars can be derived from correlations between observable properties and from certain statistical results. One of the most important of these correlations concerns temperature and luminosity—or, equivalently, colour and magnitude.
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram
When the absolute magnitudes of stars, or their intrinsic luminosities on a logarithmic scale, are plotted in a diagram against temperature or, equivalently, against the spectral types, the stars do not fall at random on the diagram but tend to congregate in certain restricted domains. Such a plot is usually called a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, named for the early 20th-century astronomers Ejnar Hertzsprung of Denmark and Henry Norris Russell of the United States, who independently discovered the relations shown in it. As is seen in the diagram, most of the congregated stars are dwarfs lying closely around a diagonal line called the main sequence. These stars range from hot, O- and B-type, blue objects at least 10,000 times brighter than the Sun down through white A-type stars such as Sirius to orange K-type stars such as Epsilon Eridani and finally to M-type red dwarfs thousands of times fainter than the Sun. The sequence is continuous; the luminosities fall off smoothly with decreasing surface temperature; the masses and radii decrease but at a much slower rate; and the stellar densities gradually increase.
The second group of stars to be recognized was a group of giants—such objects as Capella, Arcturus, and Aldebaran—which are yellow, orange, or red stars about 100 times as bright as the Sun and have radii on the order of 10–30 million km (about 6–20 million miles, or 15–40 times as large as the Sun). The giants lie above the main sequence in the upper right portion of the diagram. The category of supergiants includes stars of all spectral types; these stars show a large spread in intrinsic brightness, and some even approach absolute magnitudes of −7 or −8. A few red supergiants, such as the variable star VV Cephei, exceed in size the orbit of Jupiter or even that of Saturn, although most of them are smaller. Supergiants are short-lived and rare objects, but they can be seen at great distances because of their tremendous luminosity.
Subgiants are stars that are redder and larger than main-sequence stars of the same luminosity. Many of the best-known examples are found in close binary systems where conditions favour their detection.
The white dwarf domain lies about 10 magnitudes below the main sequence. These stars are in the last stages of their evolution (see below End states of stars).
The spectrum-luminosity diagram has numerous gaps. Few stars exist above the white dwarfs and to the left of the main sequence. The giants are separated from the main sequence by a gap named for Hertzsprung, who in 1911 became the first to recognize the difference between main-sequence and giant stars. The actual concentration of stars differs considerably in different parts of the diagram. Highly luminous stars are rare, whereas those of low luminosity are very numerous.
The spectrum-luminosity diagram applies to the stars in the galactic spiral arm in the neighbourhood of the Sun and represents what would be obtained if a composite Hertzsprung-Russell diagram were constructed combining data for a large number of the star groups called open (or galactic) star clusters, as, for example, the double cluster h and χ Persei, the Pleiades, the Coma cluster, and the Hyades. It includes very young stars, a few million years old, as well as ancient stars perhaps as old as 10 billion years.
By contrast, another Hertzsprung-Russell diagram exhibits the type of temperature-luminosity, or colour-magnitude, relation characteristic of stars in globular clusters, in the central bulge of the Galaxy, and in elliptical external galaxies—namely, of the so-called stellar Population II. (In addition to these oldest objects, Population II includes other very old stars that occur between the spiral arms of the Galaxy and at some distance above and below the galactic plane.) Because these systems are very remote from the observer, the stars are faint, and their spectra can be observed only with difficulty. As a consequence, their colours rather than their spectra must be measured. Since the colours are closely related to surface temperature and therefore to spectral types, equivalent spectral types may be used, but it is stellar colours, not spectral types, that are observed in this instance (see colour-magnitude diagram).
The differences between the two Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams are striking. In the second there are no supergiants, and, instead of a domain at an absolute magnitude of about 0, the giant stars form a branch that starts high and to the right at about −3.5 for very red stars and flows in a continuous sequence until it reaches an absolute magnitude of about 0. At that point the giant branch splits: a main band of stars, all about the same colour, proceeds downward (i.e., to fainter stars) to a magnitude of about +3 and then connects to the main sequence at about +4 by way of a narrow band. The main sequence of Population II stars extends downward to fainter, redder stars in much the same way as in the spiral-arm Population I stars. (Population I is the name given to the stars found within the spiral arms of the Milky Way system and other galaxies of the same type. Containing stars of all ages, from those in the process of formation to defunct white dwarfs, Population I is nonetheless always associated with the gas and dust of the interstellar medium.) The main sequence ends at about spectral type G, however, and does not extend up through the A, B, and O spectral types, though occasionally a few such stars, blue stragglers, are found in the region normally occupied by the main sequence. The blue stragglers are likely red stars that have gained mass from another star through stellar collision or mass transfer.
The other band of stars formed from the split of the giant branch is the “horizontal branch,” which falls near magnitude +0.6 and fills the aforementioned Hertzsprung gap, extending to increasingly blue stars beyond the RR Lyrae stars (see below Variable stars), which are indicated by the crosshatched area in the diagram. Among these blue hot stars are found novas and the nuclei of planetary nebulas, the latter so called because their photographic image resembles that of a distant planet. Not all globular clusters show identical colour-magnitude diagrams, which may be due to differences in the cluster ages or other factors. (For a discussion of other aspects of colour-magnitude diagrams for star clusters, see star cluster: Globular cluster.)