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mstarry
01-30-06, 10:34 AM
If a star's temperature were doubled, its new luminosity would be 4x the original luminosity?

I know that the higher an object’s temperature, the more energy and higher frequencies it emits, but how do you know how strong it will be? I know it would be 2x, 4x, or maybe even 16x

How do u know?

cato
01-30-06, 03:50 PM
I don't remember this off the top of my head. I can find out when I get home (if I finish my homework on time =] )

you can hunt through here for answers :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminosity
gotta love wikipedia =]

leopold99
01-30-06, 05:33 PM
i googled the term luminosity and here is the first link
http://astrosun2.astro.cornell.edu/academics/courses//astro201/lumin_star.htm

Facial
01-30-06, 11:01 PM
T^4, guys. It should be 16X brighter.

leopold99
01-30-06, 11:25 PM
according to the link i gave

L=R^2 X T^4


A hotter star is more luminous than a cooler one of the same radius
A bigger star is more luminous than a smaller one of the same temperature