Title: Post-Main%20Sequence%20Evolution%20of%20Massive%20Stars
1Post-Main Sequence Evolution of Massive Stars
- Stars of more than 8 solar masses leave behind
neutron stars and black holes and typically
explode as supernovae.
2But first, NOVAE from WDs
- Back to binary star evolution
- More massive star leaves MS first, becomes RG,
then WD - Less massive star swells as it leaves MS, fills
its Roche lobe - Mass then flows from companion star onto WD
through inner Lagrangian point. - This mass forms an ACCRETION DISK around the WD
- The mass stream hits the outer part of the
accretion disk and makes a HOT SPOT
3Accretion Disk in Close Binary w/ WD
4Accretion Disks Cataclysmic Variables
- Viscosity in the ACCRETION DISK (AD) causes its
gas to - lose its angular momentum and SPIRAL INTO THE
WD - as it does so, it gets very hot and EMITS
ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION - often, more radiation comes from the disk than
from the (very small) WD - INSTABILITIES in the AD can cause dramatic
variations in rate of inflow - therefore, AD Luminosity varies a lot --
- CATACLYSMIC VARIABLES produced this way.
5NOVAE
- An explosion on the surface of a WD Nova
Herculis 1934 and typical light curve
6What makes a Nova explode?
- As H gas from companion builds up on WD surface
it gets hotter and denser - Eventually (typically after 103 or 104 yrs) it
IGNITES - This THERMONUCLEAR DETONATION (of pp chains to
He, mainly) - produces a huge burst of POWER -- this is a
NOVA.
7Novae and Recurrent Novae
- Most of the gas is expelled in a rapidly
expanding shell. - Luminosity rises between 5 and 12 magnitudes
(100--63,000 times) in just a few days - rapid decline over a couple of weeks is followed
by slow decline to original low L in a few years. - While most of the accreted H is blasted off in
nova explosions some (plus some created He) does
remain on the WD surface and the WD's mass
increases. - As long as mass continues to flow from the
companion, many such explosions can occur --
RECURRENT NOVAE
8Ejected Shells Novae Persei Cygni
9Thought Question
- What happens to a white dwarf when it accretes
enough matter to reach the 1.4 MSun limit? - A. It explodes
- B. It collapses into a neutron star
- C. It gradually begins fusing carbon in its
core
10Thought Question
- What happens to a white dwarf when it accretes
enough matter to reach the 1.4 MSun limit? - A. It explodes
- B. It collapses into a neutron star
- C. It gradually begins fusing carbon in its
core -
-
11Life Stages of High-Mass Stars
- Late life stages of high-mass stars are similar
to those of low-mass stars - Hydrogen core fusion (main sequence)
- Hydrogen shell burning (supergiant)
- Helium core fusion (supergiant)
12How do high-mass stars make the elements
necessary for life?
13Big Bang made 75 H, 25 He stars make
everything else
14Helium fusion can make carbon in low-mass stars
15CNO cycle can change C into N and O
16Helium Capture
- High core temperatures allow helium to fuse with
heavier elements to make Oxygen, Neon, Magnesium,
etc.
17Helium capture builds C into O, Ne, Mg,
18Massive Stars Cook Heavy Elements
- After MS, H shell burning, He core burning, He
shell burning, stars w/ Mgt8M? have so much
gravity that - the C core crushed until it reaches T gt 7 x 108 K
so - Carbon can also fuse
- 12C 4He ? 16O ? some
- 16O 4He ? 20Ne ? also some
- 12C 12C ? 24Mg ?
- These fuels produce less energy per mass, so each
is burned up faster and faster - Most will fuse Oxygen and Neon too
- 16O 16O ? 32S ? 20Ne 4He ? 24Mg ?
19Multiple Shell Burning
- Advanced nuclear burning proceeds in a series of
nested shells - High Mass Star Evolution
20Element Formation Abundances
- The more common heavy elements have an even
number of protons built up by 4He nuclei (alpha
process) - H and He alone were made in the BIG BANG.
- All other elements (up to iron) are made in
PRE-SUPERNOVAE stars. - Anything heavier than Fe (unstable) made in
Supernovae
Fe is endpoint of fusion it has the minimum mass
per nucleon energy would be absorbed -- not
given off -- to go to heavier nuclei
21Alpha Process Builds Middle Elements
22Elemental Abundances H Rules!
23How Does a High-Mass Star Die?
24Approach to Supernova
- The iron core collapses excess neutrons build up
- 16O 16O ? 31S n
- Si fusion up to Fe takes lt 1 day to complete!
- Mass of Fe core grows exceeds Chandrasekhar mass
- Yielding CORE COLLAPSE
- Key details high energy photons are absorbed,
causing a pressure drop photodisintegration! - 56Fe ? ? 13(4He) 4 n
- 4He ? ? 2p 2n
- Only when density gt 109g/cm3 (500 cars/teaspoon)
- and T gt 5x109K
25Neutronization and Collapse
- This PHOTODISINTEGRATION occurs in lt 0.1 second!
- Further NEUTRONIZATION (production of excess
neutrons) occurs when electrons are crushed
into protons - p e ? n ? (weak nuclear reaction)
- Atoms disappear and become nuclear matter,
with density about 4 x 1014 g/cm3 ! - The core collapses!
- (Whole sun into a city size -- a billion
tons/teaspoon!)
26Supernova Explosion
- Core electron degeneracy pressure goes away
because electrons combine with protons, making
neutrons and neutrinos - Neutrons collapse to the center, forming a
neutron star
27Core Collapse, continued
- Once NEUTRONIZATION is nearly complete,
- the core collapse is halted by a combination of
NEUTRON DEGENERACY PRESSURE - and the REPULSIVE PART OF THE STRONG NUCLEAR
FORCE. - The core, with radius about 10 km, becomes a
NEUTRON STAR (NS -- to which we'll return shortly)
28FORMATION of a TYPE II SUPERNOVA
- Ca, Si, S, Mg, Ne, O, C layers continue to burn
and collapse onto the NS core. - BUT huge NEUTRINO PRESSURES build up, and, in
addition, the NS is so stiff that matter
hitting it BOUNCES from a SHOCK. - Bounce works better if star is rotating (and has
big magnetic fields) - EXPLOSIVE NUCLEOSYNTHESIS produces ELEMENTS
HEAVIER THAN IRON - Also helps BLAST OFF MOST OF THE STAR'S ENVELOPE.
- This rapidly expanding star gets very luminous,
very fast since the radius is so big A SUPERNOVA
29Energy and neutrons released in supernova
explosion enable elements heavier than iron to
form, including Au (gold) and U
30Type II (massive star) SN formation, illustrated
31PROPERTIES of TYPE II SUPERNOVAE
- Luminosities equal more than that of 109
ordinary stars for a few days, while at peak
power - Timescales rise, 1 day peak, 1 week hump, 2 to
3 months slow decline, 2 years (powered by
56Co).
32More SN Type II Properties
- Most of the star's mass is EJECTED at velocities
from 10,000-30,000 km/s (3-10 of the speed of
light!!!). - Spectra are rich in H lines much hydrogen
expelled
Crab nebula photos 14 years apart dont line
up Illustrates fast outward motion
33Supernova Remnants (bright nebulae)
- The expelled gas interacts with the ISM to make a
SUPERNOVA REMNANT, a BRIGHT NEBULA which glows
for 105 years Crab Nebula Views - CRAB SN was seen in 1054 CE and its expanding SNR
is beautiful now Crab Nebula Movie
34SN 1987A
- The nearest, recent Type II SN in the Large
Magellanic Cloud (50 kpc away) - Neutrinos (17) were detected only ones not from
the Sun great confirmation of massive star
evolution theory!
35Rings Around Supernova 1987A
- The supernovas flash of light caused rings of
gas (ejected from star earlier) around the
supernova to glow
36Impact of Debris with Rings
- More recent observations are showing the inner
ring light up as debris crashes into it
37Type I (White Dwarf) Supernovae
- Type I SN are usually even more luminous
- peak M -19 This is about as luminous as an
ENTIRE GALAXY! - Very close to a STANDARD CANDLE, I.e, all Type
Ia (WD) SNe are nearly equally bright - Rise in 1 day fast decline, months slow
decline, over years - Spectra are devoid of H lines (no H envelope)
- Often found in Pop II (low metalicity) regions,
while Type II SN are associated only with Pop I
(composition like sun) stars.
38Type Ia SN formation, illustrated
WD driven over the Chandrasekhar limit thanks
to accretion in a binary system
39Origin of Type I SNe
- Majority, at least, arise from WDs in binary
systems (Type Ia). - If WD starts out massive and close to
Chandrasekhar limit, then if it accretes much
mass from companion it can be pushed over the
maximum mass electron degeneracy pressure can
support. - This usually leads to a collapse and immediate
DETONATION EXPLOSION, which usually COMPLETELY
DISRUPTS the star (i.e. no NS left behind). - Some Type I SNe may have a WD core collapse to a
Neutron Star and most (but not all) gas
expelled. - Exploding layers shine even brighter since they
don't have to push out overlying mass that high
mass (Type II) SN have. No envelope also explains
the missing H lines.
40Explosive Nucleosynthesis
- Nearly all elements heavier than iron are
produced in SN explosions - The s-process (slow) adds neutrons to build
elements via intermediate decays (AGB stars
SN) - 56Fen?57Fe 57Fen?58Fe 58Fen?59Fe
- These neutron-rich isotopes decay to elements
with more protons that are stable 59Fe?59Coe-? - The r-process adds lots of neutrons very fast to
produce the heaviest stable (and unstable)
elements (those above Bismuth) only during SN
explosions - These elements then pollute (enrich?) the ISM
- Power for SN light curves comes from Ni-56 and
Co-56 decays
41Role of Mass
- A stars mass determines its entire life story
because it determines its core temperature - High-mass stars with gt8MSun have short lives,
eventually becoming hot enough to make iron, and
end in supernova explosions - Low-mass stars with lt2MSun have long lives,
never become hot enough to fuse carbon nuclei,
and end as white dwarfs - Intermediate mass stars can make elements heavier
than carbon but end as white dwarfs
42- 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!
43- Reasons for Life Stages
- Core shrinks and heats until its hot enough for
fusion - Nuclei with larger charges require higher
temperatures 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!
44- 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 (Type II) leaves neutron star behind
Not to scale!
45Good Stars! (They Recycle)
- ISM
- Star formation
- Stellar Evolution
- Explosions and enrichment of the
- ISM (do again!).
- About 3 solar masses / year are recycled in the
Milky Way