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Stars Tom Burbine tburbinemtholyoke'edu

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A planet is a celestial body that is not massive enough to ... We are going to go over. Composition of Stars. Thermonuclear Fusion. Stellar Classification ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stars Tom Burbine tburbinemtholyoke'edu


1
StarsTom Burbinetburbine_at_mtholyoke.edu
  • http//www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/tburbine/emmanuel
    .ppt

2
  • What is the difference between a star and a
    planet?

3
  • A star is a celestial body that radiates energy
    derived from thermonuclear fusion in its interior
  • A planet is a celestial body that is not massive
    enough to cause thermonuclear fusion

4
  • What is the closest star to the Earth?

5
  • The Sun
  • The second closest is Proxima Centauri (4.2 light
    years away)

http//www.astronomy.com/asy/objects/images/sun_fu
ll_disk_soho_09_14_1997.jpg
6
Today
  • We are going to go over
  • Composition of Stars
  • Thermonuclear Fusion
  • Stellar Classification

7
Stars are made up of Atoms
  • Atoms are made up of 3 types of particles
  • Protons positive charge (1)
  • Electrons negative charge (-1)
  • Neutrons neutral charge (no charge)
  • Protons and Neutrons are found in the nucleus

8
Lithium Atom
http//www.biocrawler.com/encyclopedia/ImageAtom_
diagram.png
9
Periodic Table
http//athene.as.arizona.edu/lclose/teaching/a202
/images/periodic.gif
10
Elements
  • Different elements have different numbers of
    protons
  • Hydrogen (H) is the simplest (one proton)
  • Helium (He) is the second-simplest (two protons)

11
Composition of Suns photosphere
http//filer.case.edu/sjr16/advanced/sun_astar.htm
l
12
Energy levels where an electron can reside To go
to a higher energy level, an electron needs to
gain energy To go to a lower energy level, an
electron needs to lose energy
Hydrogen
13
cant happen
Hydrogen
14
Energy levels Vary for Different Atoms
15
Since Energy Levels Vary for Different Atoms
  • Different atoms emit and absorb energy at
    different energies

16
c frequencywavelength c is speed of light
Higher the frequency, Higher the energy of the
photon Higher the wavelength, Lower the energy of
the photon
17
Intensity
Longer wavelength Shorter frequency, shorter
energy
http//www.physics.utoledo.edu/lsa/_p1750/SPlab.j
pg
18
Structure of the Sun
19
Sun
  • Core 15 million Kelvin where fusion occurs
  • High temperature due to the weight of the outer
    layers of the sun, which causes fusion to occur
    which provides the energy and maintains the high
    temperature
  • Photosphere 5,800 Kelvin surface of Sun

20
Nuclear Fusion
  • Nuclear fusion is the process by which atoms join
    together to form a heavier nucleus.
  • It is accompanied by the release of energy for
    atoms lighter than iron

21
Energy Source for Sun
  • Fusing hydrogen into helium
  • Hydrogen nucleus 1 proton
  • Helium nucleus 2 protons, 2 neutrons
  • Need high temperatures for this to occur

22
http//www.astronomynotes.com/starsun/s3.htm
23
http//www.astronomynotes.com/starsun/s3.htm
24
How does Fusion Convert Mass to Energy
  • What is the most famous formula in the world?

25
E mc2
  • m is mass in kilograms
  • c is speed of light in meters/s
  • E (energy) is in joules
  • very small amounts of mass may be converted into
    a very large amount of energy

26
Who came up with it?
27
http//msnbcmedia3.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Phot
os/z_Projects_in_progress/050418_Einstein/050405_e
instein_tongue.widec.jpg
28
http//observe.arc.nasa.gov/nasa/exhibits/stars/st
ar_6.html
29
Process is actually more complicated
Steps 1 and 2 must occur twice
30
Reaction in Sun
  • Takes an average of 109 years to complete
  • It if occurred faster, Sun would run out of fuel

31
Neutrinos
  • Neutrinos almost massless particles
  • No charge
  • First postulated in 1930 by Wolfgang Pauli to
    explain conservation of energy in the decay of a
    neutron into a proton and an electron.
  • It takes a neutrino about 2 seconds to exit the
    Sun

32
The solar neutrino problem
  • Less neutrinos appear to be produced from the Sun
    than expected from models

33
How was the Homestake Gold Mine used to detect
neutrinos?
  • A 400,000 liter vat of chlorine-containing
    cleaning fluid was placed in the Homestake gold
    mine
  • Every so often Chlorine would capture a neutrino
    and turn into radioactive argon
  • Modelers predict 1 reaction per day
  • Experiments found 1 reaction every 3 days
  • Later discovered that this experiment was only
    sensitive to one of three types of neutrinos

34
  • How much longer will it take the Sun to use up
    all its fuel?
  • When the Sun uses up its fuel it will start
    expanding, which will be bad for people living on
    Earth

35
Things you need to know
  • Energy source for sun is four hydrogen atoms
    combining to produce one helium atom
  • About 0.7 of the original mass is turned into
    energy during this process
  • 10 of the Suns mass is hot (8 million Kelvin
    or above) enough to undergo fusion
  • Mass of the Sun 2 x 1030 kg

36
And
  • Total lifetime (energy available)
  • (rate energy/time at which sun emits
    energy)
  • rate energy/time at which the Sun emits energy
    is equal to 3.8 x 1026 Watts (Joules/second)

37
And
  • Time left Lifetime current age
  • Current age 5 billion years

38
Calculation
  • Mass of the Sun that is turned into energy
  • m 2 x 1030 kg 10 0.7
  • m 1.4 x 1027 kg of Sun can be turned into
    energy
  • E mc2
  • E 1.4 x 1027 kg times 9 x 1016 m2/s2
  • E 1.26 x 1044 Joules

39
Calculation
  • Lifetime 1.26 x 1044 Joules/3.8 x 1026
    Joules/second
  • Lifetime 3.3 x 1017 seconds
  • Lifetime 1.05 x 1010 years
  • Time left 10.5 billion years 5 billion years
  • Time left 5.5 billion years

40
Fusion
  • The rate of nuclear fusion is a function of
    temperature
  • Hotter temperature higher fusion rate
  • Lower temperature lower fusion rate
  • If the Sun gets hotter or colder, it may not be
    good for life on Earth

41
What is happening to the amount of Helium in the
Sun?
  • A) Its increasing
  • B) its decreasing
  • C) Its staying the same

42
What is happening to the amount of Helium in the
Sun?
  • A) Its increasing
  • B) its decreasing
  • C) Its staying the same

43
So how does the Sun stay relatively constant in
Luminosity (power output)
44
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45
Classification of Stars
  • Stars are classified according to luminosity and
    surface temperature
  • Luminosity is the amount of power (energy/second)
    it radiates into space
  • Surface temperature is the temperature of the
    surface

46
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47
Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
  • If you plot temperature versus luminosity of
    stars, the stars plot in specific regions

48
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49
OBAFGKM
  • Oh Be A Fine Girl/Gal Kiss Me
  • Play song
  • http//www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/tburbine/ASTR223/
    OBAFGKM.mp3

50
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51
Remember
  • Temperature on x-axis (vertical) does from higher
    to lower temperature
  • O hottest
  • M - coldest

52
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53
Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
  • Most stars fall along the main sequence
  • Stars at the top above the main sequence are
    called Supergiants
  • Stars between the Supergiants and main sequence
    are called Giants
  • Stars below the Main Sequence are called White
    Dwarfs

54
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55
Radius
  • Smallest stars on the main sequence fall on the
    bottom right
  • Largest stars on main sequence fall on the top
    left
  • At the same size, hotter stars are more luminous
    than cooler ones
  • At the same temperature, larger stars are more
    luminous than smaller ones

56
(No Transcript)
57
Main Sequence Stars
  • Fuse Hydrogen into Helium for energy
  • On main sequence, mass tends to decrease with
    decreasing temperature

58
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