Title: Today in Astronomy 241: late stellar evolution
1Today in Astronomy 241 late stellar evolution
- Todays reading Carroll and Ostlie Sec, 13.2, on
- Ascent of the red giant branch fully convective
stars - The horizontal branch helium-burning main
sequence - The asymptotic giant branch
- Death of low-mass stars
M10, by T. Credner and S. Kohle (Bonn U.)
2Late stages of stellar evolution
- After the main sequence and the subgiant phase
- Red giant phase
- Core collapse and heating
- Convection zone extends inward (dredge-up)
eventually star becomes fully convective - Extreme expansion of envelope of star
- Core temperature reaches 108 K, and triple-a
begins burning helium efficiently (helium flash
in stars with Mgt2Msun) - Horizontal branch
- Core helium burning, shell hydrogen burning
3Late stages of stellar evolution (continued)
- Asymptotic giant branch
- Further dredge-ups
- Shell helium hydrogen burning, carbon-oxygen core
- Occasional helium shell flashes, from ignition of
helium passed downwards by the hydrogen-burning
shell - Mechanical instabilities, thermal pulses,
pulsations, and mass loss - Further evolution of stars with M lt 8Msun
- Low-mass end ejection of stellar envelope,
leaving degenerate helium or carbon-oxygen core
planetary nebula and white dwarf remnant - High-mass end Type I supernova?
4Post-main-sequence stellar evolution
Post-main-sequence development of a 5 Msun star
(Iben 1967)
Giant branches star mostly convective and
expanding. (Reverse of the Hayashi track.)
5Post-main-sequence stellar evolution (continued)
Kippenhahn, Thomas and Weigert 1965
Points on last plot 1 2 3 6,7
10 11 13,14
6An evolved population (globular cluster)
Like all Galactic globular clusters, M3 is about
12000 Myr old. It lies about 10400 pc away.
Image J. Challis (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA).
B-V
7M3 color-magnitude diagram
AGB
HB
RG
Blue stragglers
SG
MS
MS turnoff
RR Lyrae (pulsating HB stars are highlighted)
Data from J. Hartmann (CfA)