Title: Chapter 13: The Deaths of Stars
1Chapter 13The Deaths of Stars
The Helix Nebula
2Planetary Nebulae
NGC 7293, Helix Nebula
NGC 6826
Menzel 3
3From Supergiants to White Dwarfs
4Structure of an Old Low-Mass Star
Near the end of its life, a low-mass star like
the Sun travels up the AGB and becomes a
supergiant.
5Structure of an Old High-Mass Star
6Supernovae Proceed Irregularly
Computer simulations showing how chaotic the
supernova is deep inside the star as it begins to
explode.
7Supernova 1987A
8Rotating, Magnetized Neutron Star
Charged particles are accelerated near a neutron
stars magnetic poles and produce two oppositely
directed beams of radiation.
9WHAT DO YOU THINK?
- Will the Sun someday stop shining? If so, how?
- What is a nova?
- Where do heavy elements on the Earth like carbon,
silicon, oxygen, iron, and uranium come from? - What are cosmic rays?
- What is a pulsar?
10You will discover
- what happens to stars when core helium fusion
ceases - how heavy elements are created
- the characteristics of the end of stellar
evolution - why some stars go out relatively gently, while
others go with a bang - the incredible densities of neutron stars and how
they are observed
11PostMain-Sequence Evolution ofLow-Mass Stars
12Bipolar Planetary Nebula
13Sirius and White Dwarf
Both are hot blackbodies and strong emitters of X
rays
Sirius B, a white dwarf, at the five oclock
position
14Nova Herculis 1934
Shortly after peak brightness as a magnitude 3
star.
Two months later, magnitude 12.
15Nova Cygni 1975
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17Supernovae Proceed Irregularly
Chaos helps account for the lopsided distribution
of all elements in this supernova remnant. X-ray
images of a supernova remnant taken by Chandra.
18Gum Nebula
The Gum Nebula, created by a supernova 11,000
years ago, is the largest known supernova
remnant. It now has a diameter of about 2300 ly.
19Cassiopeia A
An X-ray picture of Cassiopeia A taken by Chandra
Radio image produced by the Very Large Array (VLA)
20Cosmic Ray Shower
21Shells of Gas Around SN 1987A
22Supernova Light Curves
23Recording a Pulsar
PSR 032954
24Crab Nebula and Pulsar
Observations at different wavelengths give
astronomers information about the nebulas
chemistry, motion, history, and interactions with
preexisting gas and dust.
25Crab Nebula and Pulsar
The Crabs visible flashes and X-ray pulses have
identical periods of 0.033 seconds.
26How Magnetic Field Strengths Increase
As a star collapses, it carries the magnetic
field inward, thereby increasing its strength.
27Neutron Stars Interior
The neutron star has a superconducting,
superfluid core 9.7 km in radius, surrounded by a
0.6-km-thick mantle of superfluid neutrons. The
neutron stars crust is only 0.3 km thick.
28Glitch the Vela Pulsars Spindown Rate
29Double Pulsar
Artists conception of PSR J0737-3039
30X-Ray Pulses from Centaurus X-3
X ray intensity as detected by Uhuru
31Model of a Pulsating X-Ray
Infalling gas is funneled down onto the neutron
stars magnetic poles, where it strikes the star
with enough energy to create two X-rayemitting
hot spots.
32X Rays from an X-Ray Burster
33Summary of Stellar Evolution
The evolution of isolated stars depends on their
masses.
34Summary of Stellar Evolution
35WHAT DID YOU THINK?
- Will the Sun someday cease to exist? If so, how?
- The Sun will shed matter as a planetary nebula in
about 6 billion years and then cease nuclear
fusion. Its remnant white dwarf will dim over the
succeeding billions of years. - What is a nova?
- A nova is a relatively gentle explosion of
hydrogen gas on the surface of a white dwarf in a
binary star system. - What are the origins of the carbon, silicon,
oxygen, iron, uranium, and other heavy elements
on Earth? - These elements are created during stellar
evolution, by supernovae, and by colliding
neutron stars. - What are cosmic rays?
- Cosmic rays are high-speed particles (mostly
hydrogen and other atomic nuclei) in space. Many
of them are believed to have been created as a
result of supernovae. - What is a pulsar?
- A pulsar is a rotating neutron star in which the
magnetic fields axis does not coincide with the
rotation axis. The beam of radiation it emits
sweeps across our region of space.
36Key Terms
asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star Chandrasekhar
limit cosmic ray cosmic ray shower glitch helium
shell flash helium shell fusion lighthouse
model neutron degeneracy pressure neutron star
nova (plural novae) photodisintegration planetary
nebula pulsar quark secondary cosmic
ray supernova Type Ia supernova Type II
supernova white dwarf X-ray burster