Title: Today in Astronomy 241: nuclear fusion in stars
1Today in Astronomy 241 nuclear fusion in stars
- Todays reading Carroll and Ostlie Chap. 10.3,
on - Nuclear fusion
- Nuclear energy generation in stars
- The luminosity equation
(NASA/GSFC)
2The Sun is nuclear powered.
- As you are presumed to know, from AST 111 and
142 - The solar system is known to be about 4.5?109
years old, from isotope dating of meteorites and
of the oldest rocks found on the Moon. The Sun is
at least as old as the solar system. - Thus the Sun cannot be gravity powered this
would only last of order 107 years (example
10.3). - Thus the Sun cannot be burning in the normal
sense (chemical-energy powered) this would only
last of order 105 years (problem 10.3). - Thus the Sun is nuclear powered, by fusion of the
nuclei of light elements (mostly hydrogen) this
can last at least 1010 years (example 10.4).
3Nuclear reaction cross sections
- The quantity that is needed in nuclear reaction
calculations, and is measurable in the
laboratory - Cross section for fusion of two nuclei (charges
Z1 and Z2)
where S(E) varies little with varying energy, and
where
4Nuclear reaction rates
- Reaction rate coefficient (reactions per unit
time per unit volume) for particles i and target
x - The integrand, apart from S(E), is sharply peaked
at energy(the Gamow peak see problem 10.8)
5MB distrib. X Penetration prob. gt Gamow peak
6Nuclear energy generation in stars
- S(E) usually expanded in a power series result
of integral parameterized aswhere a is
usually 2 (two-body collisions) and b can vary
over a wide range (1 to 40!). The energy
generation rate for a given reaction is where
a a-1, and the total energy generation rate is
the sum of these expressions for all reactions.
7The luminosity equation
- where Lr is the luminosity generated within the
star between the center and radius r, and r and e
are the mass density and total energy generation
rate at radius r. - This is the fourth of the important equations
that must be solved simultaneously to determine
the interior structure of a star, along with
hydrostatic equilibrium, mass conservation, and
the equation of state.
8The proton-proton chains
- PP I for example (70 of pp chain reactions)
From Chaisson and McMillan, Astronomy Today
9(No Transcript)
10Leftover problem from last class
- Recall that for
photons. Show that the momentum distribution
function for photons emitted by a blackbody
isand from this and the pressure integral
re-derive the radiation pressure from a
blackbody.
11Todays in-class problems
- Problem 10.7.
- Show also that apart from the factor S(E), the
integrand in the equation for nuclear reaction
rates can be written as - Calculate the ratio of the values of
at 107 and 108 K, to gain an impression of
the extreme temperature sensitivity of nuclear
reactions in stars.
12Todays in-class problems (continued)
- Answers and/or secrets of the problems we did
last class - 1. Were supposed to derive the ideal gas law
from the pressure integral and the
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution. Ignoring
relativity, we write the pressure integral as - Abbreviate and instead of
considering the integral directly, try instead
to calculate
13Todays in-class problems (continued)
- Substitute polar coordinates
- and then make a few more substitutions
14Todays in-class problems (continued)
- You have done the u integral many times
integrate it by parts four times, and you get
15Todays in-class problems (continued)
- Now, note that ? is half a cycle for both sin and
cos, so
16Todays in-class problems (continued)
17Todays in-class problems (continued)
- One can use the same basic integration of
Gaussians process, or a combination of this
basic process and integration by parts, to
integrate the more general formBut that
would take a few more pages, and I think its
safe to leave to the imagination
18Todays in-class problems (continued)
- 2. To derive blackbody radiation pressure from
the pressure integral and the momentum
distribution of photons in blackbody radiation,
start with the fully-relativistic form of the
integral and take the speed of the particle to be
c