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Today in Astronomy 241: the fate of massive stars

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Title: Today in Astronomy 241: the fate of massive stars


1
Today in Astronomy 241 the fate of massive stars
  • Todays reading Carroll and Ostlie pp. 517-533,
    on
  • Neutron star and black hole formation
  • Supernovae of type II
  • Young supernova remnants, their light curves and
    energetics
  • Explosive nucleosynthesis
  • Before and after Supernova 1987A (David Malin,
    Anglo-Australian Observatory)

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Late stages of evolution of massive stars
  • For massive stars (those with core masses gt
    2Msun)
  • AGB evolution
  • Repeated core collapse - fusion reignition -
    nuclear fuel exhaustion occurs, including silicon
    burning to produce iron-peak elements.
  • Each of the successive fuel exhaustions is faster
    than the last. For a 20 M sun star,
  • hydrogen burning (main sequence) lasts 107 years
  • helium burning (horizontal branch) lasts 106
    years
  • carbon burning lasts 300 years
  • oxygen burning lasts 200 days
  • silicon burning lasts 2 days !

5
Death of massive stars
  • The latter stages happen so fast that there isnt
    time for the star to eject much of its envelope.
  • The mass of the iron core is greater than the
    maximum mass for white dwarf stars electron
    degeneracy pressure cannot support the weight of
    the core.
  • No further heat can be generated from fusion
    reactions.
  • Thus the star collapses under its weight. The
    core collapses fastest, and goes from a diameter
    of about 10000 km to 50 km in about a second.
  • As the core collapses, it gets hot enough for
    highly endothermic reactions to take place -
    nuclear disintegration and reverse b-decay - and
    it turns into a neutron gas.

6
Death of massive stars (continued)
  • Neutrons are capable of exerting greater
    degeneracy pressure than electrons, due to their
    larger rest mass.
  • When the core reaches dimensions of tens of
    kilometers, neutron degeneracy pressure sets
    in, stiffening the core tremendously.
  • The outer parts of the star, imploding on the
    core at high speeds, bounce off the degenerate
    neutron gas.

7
Death of massive stars (continued)
  • The bounce results in the explosion of the star,
    giving it an enormous luminosity for a while (109
    Lsun or so, for a few weeks) - a Type II
    supernova.
  • If the core is less massive than 2-3 Msun, the
    collapse of the core will stop - a neutron star
    is formed.
  • If the core is more massive than that, it will
    collapse to form a black hole.

8
Supernovae
  • Enough free energy is present in the blast to
    enable explosive nucleosynthesis
  • rapid formation of lots of carbon and oxygen,
    among others, from helium and hydrogen.
  • endothermic nuclear reactions (r-process,
    s-process) that form elements heavier than iron.
  • The exploding shell is kept hot for a while, due
    to radioactive decay of heavy elements
  • Its very bright for a month or so, after which
    the luminosity declines at the rate of a
    magnitude every couple of months.

9
Supernovae (continued)
  • Expanding shell encounters interstellar gas,
    eventually forming a nebula of the type we call
    supernova remnants.

Crab Nebula (Messier 1) Exploded 1054 AD 2kpc
away Strongest X-ray/Gamma-ray source in the
sky Expanding 1500 km/s Powered by
pulsar/rotating neutron star (30 Hz
period) Probably Type II (massive progenitor
of 10 Msun)
10
Todays in-class problems
  • Recall that, for a stellar atmosphere, the
    optical depth to the photosphere isUse this,
    along with the equation of hydrostatic
    equilibrium, to show that the pressure at the
    photosphere is(Here is the mean opacity in
    the photosphere, generally very different from
    that deep in the interior.)

11
Todays in-class problems (continued)
  • The Hayashi track, or the red giant branch.
    Suppose a star is fully convectiveSuppose
    further that its atmospheric opacity is dominated
    by bound-free transitions, for which the
    mean opacity can be (very crudely) approximated
    byFind a relationship between luminosity and
    effective temperature for stars of this type, by
    setting the pressure and temperature in the
    interior (I) equal to those at the photosphere
    (O, e).

12
Todays in-class problems (continued)
  • Sketch your result from Part B, in the form of a
    plot of Sketch also,
    on the same plot, the hydrogen-burning main
    sequence. Comment on the comparison between the
    two, and on the nature of the stars interior on
    the Hayashi track or the red giant branch.

13
Todays in-class problems
  • Just Problem 13.11.
  • Answers and/or secrets to problems done last
    time
  • A. The density declines exponentially with
    distance away from the photosphere, as we have
    seen and calculated ourselves. The enclosed mass
    changes negligibly out side the photosphere even
    the radius changes little over the range in which
    the density is significant. This makes it easy to
    integrate the hydrostatic equilibrium equation

14
Todays in-class problems (continued)
  • B,C We get for the
    fully-convective stars on the Hayashi track or
    the giant branches, luminosity decreases sharply
    with increasing temperature, quite unlike stars
    on the hydrogen burning main sequence.

Hayashi track/ giant branches
L
M.S.
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