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Introduction to Stellar Evolution

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Evolution of stars of 1/10, 1, and 15 times the mass of the Sun ... Interior structure of main-sequence stars. 0.0004 Ls. 2250 K, 0.15 Rs. 4.4 MK, 300 g/cc ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Stellar Evolution


1
Introduction toStellar Evolution
  • Joyce A. Guzik
  • Thermonuclear Applications Group, X-2
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • April 8, 2002

2
Outline
  • Single-star evolution modeling
  • stellar structure equations
  • physical input and assumptions
  • Nuclear Energy Generation
  • Evolution of stars of 1/10, 1, and 15 times the
    mass of the Sun
  • Star formation and the Initial Mass Function

3
Stellar Structure Equations (1)
1)
Mass conservation
Hydrostatic equilibrium
2)
Thermal equilibrium (note time derivative)
3)
4
Stellar Structure Equations (2)
Temperature gradient
4)
radiative diffusion
or, if
convection
5
Physical input for stellar models
  • Opacities
  • LLNL OPAL (Iglesias Rogers 1996) OP (Seaton et
    al. 1996)
  • LANL LEDCOP (Magee et al. 1995)
  • Low-temperature Opacities
  • e.g., Kurucz 1992 Alexander Ferguson 1995
    Neuforge 1993
  • Equation of State
  • OPAL (Rogers, Swenson Iglesias 1996) MHD
    (Dappen, Mihalas, Hummer, Mihalas 1988) CEFF
    (Christensen-Dalsgaard Dappen 1992) SIREFF
    (Guzik Swenson 1997)
  • Nuclear Reaction Rates
  • Caughlan Fowler 1988 Bahcall Pinsonneault
    1995 Adelberger et al. 1998 NACRE (Angulo et
    al. 1999)
  • Convection Treatment
  • Bohm-Vitense 1958 Canuto, Mazzitelli, Goldman
    (1991, 1992, 1996)
  • Element Diffusion Treatment
  • Burgers 1969 Cox, Guzik Kidman 1988 Thoul,
    Bahcall Loeb 1994

6
Assumptions and commonly omitted physics
  • 1-dimensional (spherical symmetry)
  • hydrostatic and thermal equilibrium
  • initial homogeneous composition
  • Often omitted
  • rotation (solid body or differential)
  • B fields
  • mass loss and/or accretion
  • diffusion and/or radiative levitation
  • additional mixing
  • convective overshoot
  • shear from differential rotation
  • meridional circulation
  • pulsational instabilities, etc.

7
Constraints for solar and stellar models
  • For Sun, we have excellent constraints
  • Know M, Teff, L, R, age, surface Z/X, surface
    Vrot extremely accurately.
  • Because we can resolve the disk, we can observe
    millions of oscillation modes (next weeks
    lecture)
  • Can accurately identify all modes
  • For other stars
  • Know approximately L (Hipparcos parallax),
    surface gravity (M/R2), Teff, surface
    composition M/H, v sin i (not v) from spectrum
    analysis
  • Dont know mass, age. Surface composition altered
    by mass loss, accretion, diffusion, levitation.
  • Common age and composition often assumed for
    stars in clusters
  • Eclipsing spectroscopic binaries extremely useful
    for additional constraints on stellar masses,
    radii, etc.

8
Pre-main sequence evolution tracks
Iben fig. reproduced from Bowers Deeming
9
Stellar evolution tracks

Iben fig. reproduced from Bowers Deeming
10
From Mihalas and Binney 1981
11
From Bowers Deeming
12
Iben fig. reproduced Bowers Deeming
13
Why does a star shine?
  • A star shines or radiates energy that we can
    see because
  • 1) nuclear fusion reactions are generating energy
    in its core
  • 2) it is contracting and/or cooling
  • Stars that are forming convert gravitational
    energy to thermal kinetic energy and radiate it
    away.
  • white dwarf stars have used up their nuclear
    fuel, and are slowly cooling.
  • At its current luminosity, the sun could shine
    for
  • 5,000 years (chemical energy source)
  • 32 million years (gravitational energy source)
  • 10 billion years (nuclear fusion source)

14
Figure reproduced from Neuforge et al. ApJ 550,
493 (2001)
15
From Clayton 1968
16
From Clayton 1968
17
From Clayton 1968
18
From Phillips, The Physics of Stars
19
Nuclear energy generation rates
Proton-Proton Chain
26.2 MeV per He produced
CNO Bi-Cycle
25 MeV per He produced
2.4 MeV per He used
Triple-alpha Process
20
Interior structure of main-sequence stars
20,000 Ls 31,000 K, 7 Rs
1 Ms
0.1 Ms
0.7 Ls 5610 K, 0.88 Rs
52,300 K
r0.004
0.0004 Ls 2250 K, 0.15 Rs
15 Ms
r1.5
r30
13 MK, 80 g/cc
4.4 MK, 300 g/cc
34 MK, 6 g/cc
21
What happens to a star like the Sun?
  • Protostar gravitationally until core hydrogen
    ignites (takes 20 million years).
  • Burns hydrogen in core (main-sequence phase) for
    about 11 billion years. (The Sun is now about
    halfway through this phase.)
  • When most of core H exhausted, core contracts and
    heats up. Energy released expands envelope, and
    star becomes a red giant with radius 200 x Rs.
  • When core temperature reaches 200 million K,
    three He atoms begin to fuse into carbon ( He
    flash). Star contracts and becomes bluer, and
    burns He in core for another billion years.
  • When He fuel is exhausted, star expands and
    becomes red again. Outer envelope released as a
    planetary nebula.
  • Star becomes Carbon/Oxygen core white dwarf of
    a0.6 Ms, and slowly cools.
  • Central density 500,000 g/cc. Radius about 1.5
    REarth

22
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23
The Future of the Sun (1)
  • Reaches luminosity 1.1 Ls in 1.1 billion years,
    and 1.4 Ls in 3.5 billion years (predict runaway
    greenhouse catastrophes on Earth due to
    additional water vapor in atmosphere)
  • As Sun becomes a Red Giant (H shell-burning),
  • convective envelope encompasses outer 75 of mass
    (now at only 2.5 of mass), and mixes some of the
    nuclear-processed material to the surface.
  • Sun reaches 2300 Ls, and radius of 170 Rs.
    Engulfs Mercury. Sheds 0.275 Ms in strong
    winds.
  • Helium Flash fuses He into Carbon in core for
    100 million years.

24
The Future of the Sun (2)
  • After core Helium exhausted, Sun progresses to
    the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB). Begins
    thermal pulses. Reaches luminosity 5200 Ls.
    Stronger winds reduce Suns mass further.
  • Sun spends 20 million years on AGB, and 400,000
    years thermally pulsing.
  • Suns radius increases to 213 Rs (0.99 AU), or
    about the radius of the Earths present orbit,
    but by this time Venus and Earth have moved out
    to 1.22 and 1.69 AU, respectively
  • Results for fate of Venus and Earth strongly
    depend on mass loss rate if Sun loses less
    mass, could engulf Venus and Earth

25
The Future of the Sun (3)
  • Suns rate of mass loss accelerates, and it
    spends last 100,000 years ejecting outer envelope
    as a planetary nebula.
  • Material in envelope, including some processed in
    core of sun that has been mixed to the surface,
    is expelled in the strong winds to enrich the
    interstellar medium.
  • Sun ends up as a Carbon-Oxygen core white dwarf
    of mass 0.541 Ms. Suns radius then only 1.5 x
    the radius of Earth. Orbits of Venus and Earth
    shifted to 1.34 and 1.85 AU, respectively.

26
From Sackmann et al., ApJ 418, 457 (1993)
27
What happens to a star only 1/10the mass of the
Sun?
  • Protostar gravitationally contracts until core
    hydrogen ignites (this takes 2 billion years!).
  • Burns hydrogen in core for about six trillion
    years (450 x longer than current age of
    universe!).
  • After 6 trillion years, core becomes radiative
    and burns hydrogen more rapidly. Hydrogen starts
    to burn in shell around core, and core begins to
    contract.
  • Core becomes degenerate and stops contracting.
    Star never becomes a red giant.
  • Hydrogen shell burning dies out, and star cools
    as a Helium-core white dwarf with radius a few x
    REarth.
  • (Very efficient use of H fuel--the final envelope
    H mass fraction is only 15.5, and final overall
    H fraction is only 1)

28
From Laughlin et al. ApJ, 482, 420 (1997)
0.1 Ms evolution
29
From Laughlin et al. ApJ, 482, 420 (1997)
30
What happens to a star 15 timesas massive as the
Sun?
  • Protostar gravitationally contracts until core
    hydrogen ignites (takes only 100,000 years).
  • Burns hydrogen in core for about 10 million
    years.
  • When core H exhausted and core T reaches 200
    million K, He burns in core for about 1 million
    years. Core shrinks and star evolves to the red.
  • After core He is exhausted, burns C to Ne, Ne to
    O and Si, O to Si, and Si to Fe. Stages are
    progressively shorter, and Si burning takes only
    2 days!
  • After Fe core produced, any further nuclear
    reactions consume energy instead of producing it.
    Core loses support and collapses, releasing
    gravitational energy. Outer layers are expelled,
    creating a Type II supernova.
  • Remnant of core is a neutron star of at most a
    few Ms
  • density 100 million tons/cc radius only 15 km
    . May see as a pulsar

31
From Brunish Truran, ApJ 256, 247 (1982)
32
Mass Breakpoints

Process Mass (Ms) D
burning gt0.012 H burning gt0.07 end as He
WD lt 0.8 Conv. Core on MS gt1.2 He
flash 0.8-2.25 Ends as CO WD 0.8-9 Ends as
NeOMg WD 9.-11 Ends as Type II SN/Neutron
Star 11.-50 Ends as Type Ib SN/black hole gt50
33
Star formation considerations (1)
Jeans critical mass for gravitational instability
For normal interstellar matter, density 1
atom/cc,
3000 Ms for T 10 K 100,000 Ms for T 100 K
For cold dense molecular clouds 102 - 104
atom/cc,
300 Ms for T 10 K
As a cloud contracts, if it cannot lose heat to
its surroundings, it will reach a limit to
contraction.
34
Star formation considerations (2)
  • Radiative cooling from molecules and dust grains
    important (higher µ)
  • As subclouds become Jeans unstable they will
    start to contract separately (fragmentation)
  • External heating by cosmic rays and x-rays
  • Role of initial angular momentum/rotation in
    resisting collapse?
  • Role of magnetic fields?
  • Role of turbulence (turbulent pressure)?
  • Role of observed mass outflows in forming stars?
  • Role of disk formation (more efficient cooling)
  • Massive stars contract more quickly, but if they
    form first might heat surroundings and disrupt
    formation of low mass stars.
  • How universal is initial mass function--dependen
    ce on metallicity, low mass cutoff?

35
Number of stars of different masses
  • Initial Mass Function N(m?m) µ m-1.35
  • Mass (Ms) Number
  • 49 - 50 1
  • 14 - 15 20
  • 4.5 - 5 100
  • 0.9 - 1 1000
  • 0.45 - 0.5 3000
  • 0.09 - 0.1 24,000

36
Stellar Recycling
  • Stars can eject some of their mass at various
    stages, in winds, in pulses while red giants, in
    the helium flash, as planetary nebulae while
    becoming white dwarfs, or in supernova
    explosions.
  • All elements except the light elements H, He, Li,
    Be, and B are produced in stars. These elements
    on earth (and in your body) have been processed
    through several generations of stars.
  • hydrogen and helium Big Bang
  • lithium, beryllium, boron Big Bang, cosmic rays
  • nitrogen and some helium hydrogen-burning
  • carbon, oxygen, neon helium-burning
  • neon, magnesium, aluminum, sodium
    carbon-burning
  • silicon, sulfur, argon, calcium
    oxygen-burning
  • iron, nickel, heavier elements supernovae, red
    giants
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