Title: Star Formation
1Star Formation
- Gravitational collapse of molecular cloud
- Evolution of protostars onto main sequence
- Gravitational contraction
- Luminosity versus temperature and radius
2(No Transcript)
3 Star formation
- Watch for
- Collapse of cloud
- Rotation of cloud
- Formation of disk near protostar
- Show animation
4Gravitational collapse
Which configuration has more potential energy?
A
B
5Potential energy due to gravity
6Gravitational collapse
Which configuration has more potential energy?
A
B
7Potential energy due to gravity
Sphere of mass M and radius R
Gravitational potential energy is released as
sphere shrinks
8Gravitational collapse
- How much energy is released when 1 M? of material
collapses from a radius of 10 R ? to 1 R ??
9Evolution of stars
- Stars change over their lifetimes (from formation
to death). - We can track these changes via motion of the star
in the HR diagram.
10Protostars on HR diagram
Where would a collapsing gas cloud appear on an
HR diagram?
11Gravitational collapse
- About 2?1041 J of energy is released when 1 M? of
material collapses from a radius of 10 R ? to 1 R
?. This collapse takes about 10-20 million
years. The luminosity is
Where would such an object appear on the HR
diagram?
12Protostars evolve into main-sequence stars
- Protostar collapses under gravity.
- The collapse releases energy.
- The star is relatively transparent, so the
energy is radiated away, temperature doesnt
change much. - The star gets smaller so it get dimmer.
Brighter
Hotter
13Cloud collapse to main-sequence star
evolutionary track on HR diagram
14Protostars on the HR diagram
Hotter
15Luminosity versus radius and temperature
2
1
R RSun T TSun
R 2 RSun T TSun
Which star is more luminous?
16Luminosity versus radius and temperature
2
1
R RSun T TSun
R 2 RSun T TSun
- Each cm2 of each surface emits the same amount
of radiation. - The larger stars emits more radiation because it
has a larger surface. It emits 4 times as much
radiation.
17Luminosity of a Black Body Radiator
- For the spherical object, the total power
radiated the total luminosity is - L 4?R2?T4
- T temperature
- ? Stephan-Boltzman constant
- 5.67?10-8 W/m2 K4
- R radius
18Protostars evolve into main-sequence stars
- The star gets smaller so it get dimmer.
- Next the protostar becomes opaque, light no
longer escapes easily. - Heat is trapped and the protostar gets hotter.
Brighter
Hotter
19Why does temperature increase as star contracts?
- Note that luminosity remains constant.
- To produce constant luminosity as radius
decreases, need increase in temperature
20More massive stars form faster
21As gas is pulled in towards a protostar which
does not occur
- the gas starts to rotate more rapidly
- some of the gas is ejected in jets
- some of the gas forms a disk around the protostar
- some of the gas undergoes nuclear fusion
22Which clouds will collapse?
- Gravitational force causes objects to collapse.
- What keeps objects from collapsing?
- In the solar system, the motion of the planets
keeps them from falling in to the Sun. - In a gas, the random motions of the gas atoms can
support the gas against gravity.
23Temperature
lower T
higher T
- Temperature is proportional to the average
kinetic energy per molecule
k Boltzmann constant 1.38?10-23 J/K
8.62?10-5 eV/K
24Energy of gas cloud
Gravitational potential energy Sphere of mass M
and radius R Kinetic energy of N atoms
25Energy of gas cloud
If E lt 0 then gas cloud collapses If E gt 0 then
gas cloud can support itself Density of gas
cloud is n
26Critical size of gas cloud
By increasing the mass, we can always cause the
gravity to dominate so that the gas cloud
collapses. Critical size and mass are called the
Jeans length and mass
T in Kelvin, n in atoms/cm3
27Critical size of gas cloud
If we have a cloud at T 30 K and n 300 cm-3,
how large pieces does it fragment into?
Therefore, such clouds will typically form a
group of stars rather than a single star. Stars
are generally found in groups, called star
clusters or OB associations, depending on the
type of stars.
28Star cluster
29An OB association is a group of O and B class
stars which are producing ionizing radiation,
causing an HII nebula glow (example Trapezium in
Orion Nebula)
30Critical size of gas cloud
The dense cores can reach n 300,000 cm-3, how
large pieces do they fragment into?
Therefore, the dense cores fragment into
individual stars.
31Review Questions
- What is a protostars source of energy?
- How does a protostars radius and luminosity
change as it contracts? - What is the relation between luminosity, radius,
and temperature. - How does a protostars mass influence its speed
of formation? - What is the Jeans mass?