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17 January, 20:57

Star A has a temperature of 9000 K while Star B has a temperature 3000 K. If the two stars are the same size, according to the Stefan-Boltzmann law, how much brighter is star A than star B?

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  1. 17 January, 22:03
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    Star A is this many times (9000) ^4 x [4 π R^2 σ] brighter than Star B = (3000) ^4 x [4 π R^2 σ]

    Explanation:

    In accordance with the Stefan-Boltzmann Law,

    L = 4 π R^2 σ Τ^4

    (Where L = is the energy emitted out by star i. e., Brightness, R = Radius of the star, σ = 5.67 x 10^-8 Stefan-Boltzmann Constant and T is the temperature of the star)

    Star A = (9000) ^4 x [4 π R^2 σ]

    Star B = (3000) ^4 x [4 π R^2 σ]
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