Star%20Deaths - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Star%20Deaths

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Mass at the time of death determines the form of the corpse ... Fuses elements heavier than iron; blasted into space. 12. Neutron Stars: Pulsars! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Star%20Deaths


1
Star Deaths
  • Mass matters!

2
Star Deaths
  • Stars die when fusion reactions stop (still
    contains heat energy)
  • Mass at the time of death determines the form of
    the corpse
  • Stars lose mass before their corpse forms (winds,
    explosions)
  • Corpses last forever

3
Star Deaths
  • Mass (at death)
  • gt 0.08 solar mass
  • 0.08 to 1.4 solar masses
  • 1.4 to 3 solar masses
  • gt 3 solar masses
  • Corpse
  • Brown dwarf
  • White dwarf
  • Neutron star
  • Black hole!

4
White Dwarf
  • Mass bit less than the suns
  • Size about that of the earth
  • Density about 109 kg/m3
  • Made of electron gas (degenerate-greater mass,
    smaller size)
  • Shines by outflow of stored heat

5
Neutron Star
  • Mass around 2 solar masses
  • Size about 10 km (city!)
  • Density about 1017 kg/m3 (atoms nucleus!)
  • Made of neutron gas (degenerate)
  • Made in supernova explosions

6
Black Holes
  • Mass ANY expect 3 to 10 solar masses from
    normal star death
  • Size Schwarzschild radius-a few km(about 3 km
    for sun directly proportional to mass)
  • Escape speed equal to or greater than speed of
    light
  • Inside mass has zero volume, infinite
    densitythe singularity

7
Black Holes
  • Made of warped spacetime (essentially
    permanent!)
  • Time is frozen at the Schwarzschild radius (to
    outside observer) never sees objects fall in
  • As black holes gain mass, they grow in size (can
    never shrink)

8
Black Holes
  • Measure mass by visible orbiting body (Newtons
    version of Keplers 3rd)
  • Most likely found in binary stars(black hole
    regular massive star)
  • Are not cosmic vacuum cleaners (but dont get up
    close!)

9
Black Holes X-rays
  • Matter from companion star falls into an small
    accretion disk (about 10 km) around the black
    hole
  • Disk heats up to about 10,000,000 K (conversion
    of gravitational energy)
  • Opaque material of disk emits x-rays (blackbody)
  • Search in binary x-ray sources

10
Supernovas!
  • Peak at 10 billion solar luminosities
  • Lifetime about a few months
  • Total energy about 1046 joules (99 as
    neutrinos)
  • Blows off a few solar masses of material at
    thousands km/s (supernova remnant)

11
Supernovas!
  • One type Old massive star (about 10 solar
    masses) with unstable iron core
  • Core collapses in about 1 second!
  • Implosion releases gravitational energy, high
    temps for fusion reactions
  • Fuses elements heavier than iron blasted into
    space

12
Neutron Stars Pulsars!
  • Supernova core collapse makes neutron star
    (usually!)
  • Pulsars usually found near center of supernova
    remnants
  • Pulsars emit very short pulses (ms) at very
    regular intervals
  • Rapidly-rotating, highly-magnetic neutron stars
    are pulsars
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