Title: Chapter 12 Star Stuff
1Chapter 12Star Stuff
212.1 Star Birth
How do stars form? How massive are newborn
stars?
3We are star stuff because the elements
necessary for life were made in stars
4How do stars form?
5Stars are born in molecular clouds consisting
mostly of hydrogen molecules
6Stars form in places where gravity can overcome
thermal pressure in a cloud
7Cloud heats up as gravity causes it to
contract Conservation of energy Contraction can
continue if thermal energy is radiated away
8Star-forming clouds emit infrared light because
of the heat generated as stars form
9Orion Nebula is one of the closest star-forming
clouds
Infrared light from Orion
10Solar-system formation is a good example of star
birth
11As gravity forces a cloud to become smaller, it
begins to spin faster and faster
12As gravity forces a cloud to become smaller, it
begins to spin faster and faster Conservation
of angular momentum
13As gravity forces a cloud to become smaller, it
begins to spin faster and faster Conservation
of angular momentum Gas settles into a spinning
disk because spin hampers collapse perpendicular
to spin axis
14Angular momentum leads to Rotation of
protostar Disk formation and sometimes
Jets from protostar Fragmentation into
binary
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17Protostar to Main Sequence
- Protostar contracts and heats until core
temperature is sufficient for hydrogen fusion. - Contraction ends when energy released by hydrogen
fusion balances energy radiated from surface. - Takes 50 million years for star like Sun (less
time for more massive stars)
18- Summary of Star Birth
- Gravity causes gas cloud to shrink and fragment
- Core of shrinking cloud heats up
- When core gets hot enough, fusion begins and
stops the shrinking - New star achieves long-lasting state of balance
19How massive are newborn stars?
20A cluster of many stars can form out of a single
cloud.
21Very massive stars are rare
Luminosity
Low-mass stars are common
Temperature
22Stars more massive than 100 MSun would blow apart
Luminosity
Stars less massive than 0.08 MSun cant sustain
fusion
Temperature
23Pressure Gravity
- If M 0.08 MSun, then gravitational contraction
heats core until fusion begins - If M gravitational contraction before fusion can begin
24Degeneracy Pressure Laws of quantum mechanics
prohibit two electrons from occupying same state
in same place
25Thermal Pressure Depends on heat content The
main form of pressure in most stars
Degeneracy Pressure Particles cant be in same
state in same place Doesnt depend on heat
content
26Brown Dwarf
- An object less massive than 0.08 MSun
- Radiates infrared light
- Has thermal energy from gravitational contraction
- Cools off after degeneracy pressure stops
contraction
27What have we learned?
- How do stars form?
- Stars are born in cold, relatively dense
molecular clouds. - As a cloud fragment collapses under gravity, it
becomes a protostar surrounded by a spinning disk
of gas. - The protostar may also fire jets of matter
outward along its poles. Protostars rotate
rapidly, and some may spin so fast that they
split to form close binary star systems.
28What have we learned?
- How massive are newborn stars?
- Newborn stars come in a range of masses, but
cannot be less massive than 0.08MSun. - Below this mass, degeneracy pressure prevents
gravity from making the core hot enough for
efficient hydrogen fusion, and the object becomes
a failed star known as a brown dwarf.
2912.2 Life as a Low-Mass Star
What are the life stages of a low-mass star?
How does a low-mass star die?
30What are the life stages of a low mass star?
31High-Mass Stars
8 MSun
Intermediate-Mass Stars
Low-Mass Stars
Brown Dwarfs
32A star remains on the main sequence as long as it
can fuse hydrogen into helium in its core
33Life stages of a low-mass star like the Sun
34Thought Question
- What happens when a star can no longer fuse
hydrogen to helium in its core? - A. Core cools off
- B. Core shrinks and heats up
- C. Core expands and heats up
- D. Helium fusion immediately begins
35Thought Question
- What happens when a star can no longer fuse
hydrogen to helium in its core? - A. Core cools off
- B. Core shrinks and heats up
- C. Core expands and heats up
- D. Helium fusion immediately begins
36Helium fusion requires higher temperatures than
hydrogen fusion because larger charge leads to
greater repulsion Fusion of two helium nuclei
doesnt work, so helium fusion must combine three
He nuclei to make carbon
37Thought Question
- What happens as a stars inert helium core starts
to shrink? - A. Hydrogen fuses in shell around core
- B. Helium fusion slowly begins
- C. Helium fusion rate rapidly rises
- D. Core pressure sharply drops
38Thought Question
- What happens as a stars inert helium core starts
to shrink? - A. Hydrogen fuses in shell around core
- B. Helium fusion slowly begins
- C. Helium fusion rate rapidly rises
- D. Core pressure sharply drops
-
39Broken thermostat rising fusion rate in shell
does not expand core, so luminosity continues to
rise.
40Thought Question
- What happens in a low-mass star when core
temperature rises enough for helium fusion to
begin? - A. Helium fusion slowly starts up
- B. Hydrogen fusion stops
- C. Helium fusion rises very sharply
- Hint Degeneracy pressure is the main form of
pressure in the inert helium core
41Thought Question
- What happens in a low-mass star when core
temperature rises enough for helium fusion to
begin? - A. Helium fusion slowly starts up
- B. Hydrogen fusion stops
- C. Helium fusion rises very sharply
- Hint Degeneracy pressure is the main form of
pressure in the inert helium core
42Helium Flash
- Thermostat is broken in low-mass red giant
because degeneracy pressure supports core - Core temperature rises rapidly when helium fusion
begins - Helium fusion rate skyrockets until thermal
pressure takes over and expands core again
43Helium burning stars neither shrink nor grow
because thermostat is temporarily fixed.
44Thought Question
- What happens when the stars core runs out of
helium? - A. The star explodes
- B. Carbon fusion begins
- C. The core cools off
- D. Helium fuses in a shell around the core
45Thought Question
- What happens when the stars core runs out of
helium? -
- A. The star explodes
- B. Carbon fusion begins
- C. The core cools off
- D. Helium fuses in a shell around the core
46Life stages of a low-mass star like the Sun
47Star clusters help us test models of stellar
evolution because they contain stars of same age
but at different life stages
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49How does a low mass star die?
50A star like our sun dies by puffing off its outer
layers, creating a planetary nebula. Only a
white dwarf is left behind
51A star like our sun dies by puffing off its outer
layers, creating a planetary nebula. Only a
white dwarf is left behind
52A star like our sun dies by puffing off its outer
layers, creating a planetary nebula. Only a
white dwarf is left behind
53A star like our sun dies by puffing off its outer
layers, creating a planetary nebula. Only a
white dwarf is left behind
54Thought Question
- What happens to Earths orbit as Sun loses mass
late in its life? - A. Earths orbit gets bigger
- B. Earths orbit gets smaller
- C. Earths orbit stays the same
55Thought Question
- What happens to Earths orbit as Sun loses mass
late in its life? - A. Earths orbit gets bigger
- B. Earths orbit gets smaller
- C. Earths orbit stays the same
-
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58What have we learned?
- What are the life stages of a low-mass star?
- A low-mass star spends most of its life
generating energy by fusing hydrogen in its core.
Then it becomes a red giant, with a hydrogen
shell burning around an inert helium core. Next
comes helium core burning, followed by
doubleshell burning of hydrogen and helium shells
around an inert carbon core. - c In the late
59What have we learned?
- How does a low-mass star die?
- A low-mass star like the Sun never gets hot
enough to fuse carbon in its core. It expels its
outer layers into space as a planetary nebula,
leaving behind a white dwarf.
6012.3 Life as a High-Mass Star
What are the life stages of a high mass star?
How do high-mass stars make the elements
necessary for life? How does a high-mass star
die?
61What are the life stages of a high mass star?
62High-Mass Stars
8 MSun
Intermediate-Mass Stars
Low-Mass Stars
Brown Dwarfs
63High-Mass Stars Life
- Early stages are similar to those of low-mass
star - Main Sequence H fuses to He in core
- Red Supergiant H fuses to He in shell around
inert He core - Helium Core Burning He fuses to C in core (no
flash)
64CNO cycle is just another way to fuse H into He,
using carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen as
catalysts CNO cycle is main mechanism for H
fusion in high mass stars because core
temperature is higher
65High-mass stars become supergiants after core H
runs out Luminosity doesnt change much but
radius gets far larger
66How do high mass stars make the elements
necessary for life?
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68Big Bang made 75 H, 25 He stars make
everything else
69Helium fusion can make carbon in low-mass stars
70CNO cycle can change C into N and O
71Helium-capture reactions add two protons at a time
72Helium capture builds C into O, Ne, Mg,
73Advanced nuclear fusion reactions require
extremely high temperatures Only high-mass stars
can attain high enough core temperatures before
degeneracy pressure stops contraction
74Advanced reactions make heavier elements
75Advanced nuclear burning occurs in multiple shells
76Iron is dead end for fusion because nuclear
reactions involving iron do not release
energy (Fe has lowest mass per nuclear particle)
77Evidence for helium capture Higher abundances
of elements with even numbers of protons
78How does a high mass star die?
79Iron builds up in core until degeneracy pressure
can no longer resist gravity Core then suddenly
collapses, creating supernova explosion
80Core degeneracy pressure goes away because
electrons combine with protons, making neutrons
and neutrinos Neutrons collapse to the center,
forming a neutron star
81Energy and neutrons released in supernova
explosion enables elements heavier than iron to
form
82Elements made during supernova explosion
83Crab Nebula Remnant of supernova observed in
1054 A.D.
84before
after
Supernova 1987A is the nearest supernova observed
in the last 400 years
85The next nearby supernova?
86What have we learned?
- What are the life stages of a high-mass star?
- A high-mass star lives a much shorter life than a
low-mass star, fusing hydrogen into helium via
the CNO cycle. After exhausting its core
hydrogen, a high-mass star begins hydrogen shell
burning and then goes through a series of stages
burning successively heavier elements. The
furious rate of this fusion makes the star swell
in size to become a supergiant.
87What have we learned?
- How do high-mass stars make the elements
necessary for life? - In its final stages of life, a high-mass stars
core becomes hot enough to fuse carbon and other
heavy elements. The variety of different fusion
reactions produces a wide range of elements
including all the elements necessary for
lifethat are then released into space when the
star dies.
88What have we learned?
- How does a high-mass star die?
- A high-mass star dies in the explosion of a
supernova, scattering newly produced elements
into space and leaving a neutron star or black
hole behind. - The supernova occurs after fusion begins to pile
up iron in the high-mass stars core. Because
iron fusion cannot release energy, the core
cannot hold off the crush of gravity for long. In
the instant that gravity overcomes degeneracy
pressure, the core collapses and the star
explodes.
8912.4 Summary of Stellar Lives
How does a stars mass determine its life
story? How are the lives of stars with close
companions different?
90How does a stars mass determine its life story?
91- Low-Mass Star Summary
- Main Sequence H fuses to He in core
- Red Giant H fuses to He in shell around He core
- Helium Core Burning
- He fuses to C in core while H fuses to He in
shell - Double Shell Burning
- H and He both fuse in shells
- 5. Planetary Nebula leaves white dwarf behind
Not to scale!
92- Reasons for Life Stages
- Core shrinks and heats until its hot enough for
fusion - Nuclei with larger charge require higher
temperature for fusion - Core thermostat is broken while core is not hot
enough for fusion (shell burning) - Core fusion cant happen if degeneracy pressure
keeps core from shrinking
Not to scale!
93- Life Stages of High-Mass Star
- Main Sequence H fuses to He in core
- Red Supergiant H fuses to He in shell around He
core - Helium Core Burning
- He fuses to C in core while H fuses to He in
shell - Multiple Shell Burning
- Many elements fuse in shells
- 5. Supernova leaves neutron star behind
Not to scale!
94Life of a 1 MSun star
Life of a 20 MSun star
95How are the lives of stars with close companions
different?
96Thought Question
- The binary star Algol consists of a 3.7 MSun main
sequence star and a 0.8 MSun subgiant star. - Whats strange about this pairing?
- How did it come about?
97Stars in Algol are close enough that matter can
flow from subgiant onto main-sequence star
98Star that is now a subgiant was originally more
massive As it reached the end of its life and
started to grow, it began to transfer mass to its
companion Now the companion star is more massive
99What have we learned?
- How does a stars mass determine its life
story? - A stars mass determines how it lives its life.
- Low-mass stars never get hot enough to fuse
carbon or heavier elements in their cores, and
end their lives by expelling their outer layers
and leaving a white dwarf behind. - High-mass stars live short but brilliant lives,
ultimately dying in supernova explosions. - Sun
100What have we learned?
- How are the lives of stars with close
companions different? - When one star in a close binary system begins to
swell in size at the end of its hydrogen-burning
life, it can begin to transfer mass to its
companion. This mass exchange can then change the
remaining life histories of both stars. - Sun