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Part I: The Life and Death of Stars

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The simplest (although not the most accurate) description of a star is that it ... Red Supergiant (heavier elements burn in a series of shells in the star's core) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Part I: The Life and Death of Stars


1
Part I The Life and Death of Stars
  • Earth / Space Science

2
What is a star?
  • The simplest (although not the most accurate)
    description of a star is that it is a massive
    ball of gas held together by the collective
    gravity of its innumerable atoms.

3
What is a star?
  • Recall the composition of a star
  • Inward gravitational force, outward pressure
  • The pressure squeezes the gas and heats it
  • The rising temperature increases the outward
    pressure
  • Hydrostatic equilibrium is achieved
  • Gravity and pressure are in balance

4
What is a star?
  • Hydrostatic Equilibrium

5
What is a star?
  • Luminosity is the amount of energy radiated per
    second by an astronomical body.
  • Very similar to the wattage of a light bulb
  • The high temperature in the stars core causes
    heat to flow from the core to the surface,
    eventually escaping as starlight.

6
Birth of a star
  • Stars begin life as interstellar clouds.
  • A cold, dark mass of gas drifting through the
    galaxy.
  • Made up of roughly 71 Hydrogen and 27 Helium
  • Also contains solid, microscopic particles of
    silicates, carbon, and iron compounds

7
Birth of a star
  • The cloud somehow gets irritated by outside
    gravity
  • Perhaps some space debris or another cloud comes
    into contact with it.
  • Gas and dust begin to form clumps
  • These clumps encounter outside forces and
    collapse
  • Gasses drawn inward by the increasing gravity

8
Birth of a star
  • The increasing gravity begins to compress and
    heat the gas
  • The cloud of gas begins to rotate
  • This rotation causes the cloud to flatten into a
    disk
  • This disk is called either a circumstellar disk
    or a protostellar disk

9
Birth of a star
  • At the center of this disk, a protostar begins to
    form.
  • This happens approximately 1,000,000 years after
    the cloud first gets irritated.
  • This protostar is a small, hot, dense core
  • It is hotter than the original cloud of gas
  • It is not yet as hot as a star

10
Birth of a star
  • Eventually, the protostar gets hot enough to
    support nuclear fusion.
  • The proton-proton chain begins as hydrogen is
    fused to form helium and release energy.
  • Strong outflows of gasses begin
  • Jets of leftover gas stream out into space from
    the protostars poles bipolar flows
  • These bipolar flows begin to clear away gas and
    dust from around the protostar.

11
Birth of a star
12
Birth of a star
  • Actual protostar in the Orion Nebula

13
Birth of a star
  • The amount of gas and dust in the original cloud
    will determine what kind of star will be born.
  • The more massive the protostar
  • The shorter the stars life span
  • The hotter the star
  • The more luminous the star
  • This called the mass-luminosity law

14
Birth of a star
  • This example of the H-R diagram shows where
    protostars of different masses will end up on the
    main sequence
  • It also shows approximately how long they will
    live

15
Life of a star
  • Main sequence stars
  • As learned earlier, energy leaks out of a star as
    heat and light.
  • Stars need to replenish this energy in order to
    sustain their incredible masses.
  • This is achieved by converting their hydrogen
    into helium (remember energy is released when
    this happens)

16
Life of a star
  • Main sequence stars
  • Most average stars have a few billion years
    worth of hydrogen to use.
  • Our sun has about 5 billion years of H left.
  • When this hydrogen is used up, the star begins
    its long road to death.

17
Life of a star
  • Once all of the hydrogen in a stars core is used
    up several things happen
  • It begins to burn helium instead
  • The core shrinks and becomes denser
  • The pressure in the core rises, therefore
    increasing the temperature

18
Life of a star
  • Extreme waves of heat are released, pushing the
    outer layers of the star further out from the
    core.
  • This expansion causes the outer layers of the
    star to cool
  • The cooler outer layers now look red
  • This huge, red star is now called a red giant.

19
Death of a star
  • When the helium is exhausted, the star begins
    burning nitrogen, and so on
  • As each fuel is burned up, the star adjusts its
    structure
  • It grows brighter, larger, and cooler (on the
    surface its core is still extremely hot)
  • Very old red giants have an onion structure
    with extremely heavy elements such as iron at the
    core.

20
Death of a star
  • The internal structure of an old red giant

21
Death of a star
  • The increasing waves of released energy push dust
    outward from the red giant
  • Once the fuel is used up, the dust creates a
    slowly expanding shell around a hot collapsed
    core.
  • This core is now known as a white dwarf.

22
Death of a star
  • The expanding shell of gas and dust is known as a
    planetary nebula
  • New stars are born from this cloud of gas and
    dust.

23
Death of a star
  • Extremely massive stars
  • Different things happen to stars with
    significantly more mass than an average star.
  • These stars have cores that are hot enough to
    fuse carbon into higher elements such as oxygen
    and iron

24
Death of a star
  • Supernovae
  • Once a stars core turns to iron, the iron cannot
    fuse anymore to make heavier elements.
  • The immense mass of the iron core causes it to
    collapse in on itself.
  • This triggers an incredible explosion that blasts
    the outer layers of the star into space.

25
Death of a star
  • One thing that can happen at this point
  • The protons and electrons in the iron core can
    merge into neutrons.
  • This causes the core collapse into a ball about
    20km across made up of nothing but neutrons with
    a mass not too much more than our sun.
  • This is known as a neutron star

26
Death of a Star
  • Top image shows the composition of a neutron star
  • Bottom image shows a neutron surrounded by the
    supernova remnant

27
Death of a Star
  • The other thing that can happen
  • If the star is massive enough (the most massive
    stars of all), the iron core can collapse into a
    black hole

28
Intermission
29
Part II Types of Stars and Stellar Remnants
  • Along with some other stuff

30
Types of stars
  • Yellow giants
  • These stars lie between the hot, luminous, blue,
    main sequence stars and the red giants on the H-R
    diagram.
  • Yellow giants tend to pulsate
  • Their size changes, thus making their luminosity
    change.

31
Types of stars
  • Pulsating yellow giants
  • The atmospheres of yellow giants trap some of the
    radiated energy from the core
  • This energy heats the outer layers, thus raising
    pressure and causing expansion
  • The expanding gas eventually cools, the pressure
    drops, and gravity pulls the layers back down
  • The cycle goes on and on

32
Types of stars
  • White dwarfs
  • Hot, compact stars
  • Masses comparable to our Sun
  • Diameter about the size of Earth
  • Very dim (100 times fainter than the Sun)
  • In about 10 million years, white dwarves cool
    enough so as not to emit any visible light
  • These are known as black dwarves
  • About ½ of the galaxys mass is composed of white
    dwarf stars

33
Other stuff
  • Supernovae
  • The spray of elements created by nuclear fusion
    flies from the core of the star at more than
    10,000 km/sec.
  • Supernovae enrich the interstellar gas with heavy
    elements
  • Free neutrons combine with other atoms to create
    heavier elements such as gold, platinum, and
    uranium

34
Other stuff
  • Supernovae
  • When a star goes supernova, more energy is
    released in that few minutes than the star
    released during its whole lifetime.
  • Supernovae can be several billion times more
    luminous than our sun.

35
Other stuff
  • Black holes
  • Collapsed stars whose gravitational field is so
    intense that not even light can escape from them.
  • The escape velocity is greater than the speed of
    light
  • Black holes cannot be seen directly
  • Only their effect on their environment can be
    observed

36
Other stuff
  • Black holes
  • A star collapses until its mass becomes a point
    of zero radius and infinite density
  • This is known as a singularity
  • Surrounding this singularity is a region of space
    from which light cannot escape
  • The radius of this region is determined by the
    objects mass.
  • This is called the Schwarzschild Radius

37
Other Stuff
  • Black holes
  • The Schwarzschild Radius is also known as the
    event horizon
  • Outside observers are unable to see any events
    occurring inside the event horizon
  • Black holes were discovered by observing light
    from more distant objects bending as it passed by.

38
Summary
  • The life cycle of a low mass star (less than 10
    solar masses)
  • Protostar (gravity supplies energy)
  • Main sequence (hydrogen burns in core)
  • Core H is eventually consumed
  • Red Giant (hydrogen burns in shell)
  • Core contracts, heats, ignites helium
  • Yellow Giant (star pulsates)

39
Summary
  • Red Giant (helium burns in shell)
  • Outer layers eventually ejected
  • Planetary Nebula
  • The core cools
  • White Dwarf
  • Black Dwarf

40
Summary
  • The life cycle of a high mass star (more than 10
    solar masses)
  • Protostar (gravity supplies energy)
  • Main sequence (hydrogen burns in core)
  • Core H is eventually consumed
  • Yellow Giant (helium burns in core and star
    pulsates)

41
Summary
  • Red Supergiant (heavier elements burn in a series
    of shells in the stars core)
  • Buildup of iron in the core causes collapse
  • Supernova
  • Outer shell is blasted off
  • Either a neutron star or a black hole is left,
    depending on the original mass of the star

42
Our Sun
  • Our sun is a main sequence star that will have a
    total lifetime of about 5-10 billion years
  • Most likely, our sun will not go supernova
  • It will probably expand into a red giant and then
    collapse into a white dwarf.

43
For comparison
44
For comparison
45
For comparison
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