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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON PHYS3010W1 SEMESTER 2 EXAMINATION 201 0/11 Stellar Evolution Duration: 120 MINS Answer all questions in Section A and two and only two questions in Section B. Section A carries 1/3 of the total marks for the exam paper and you should aim to spend about 40 mins on it. Section 8 carries 2/3 of the total marks for the exam paper and you should aim to spend about 80 mins on it. A Sheet of Physical Constants will be provided with this examination paper. An outline marking scheme is shown in brackets to the right of each question. Only university approved calculators may be used. Number of Copyright 2010 © University of Southampton Pages 9 2 PHYS3010W1 Section A A1. Most of a star's life is spent on the main sequence. Why are the star's luminosity and surface temperature roughly constant during this stage of evolution? Describe briefly the two main nuclear fusion pathways occurring in main sequence stars, and how these determine the main energy transport mechanism within [4] stellar cores. A2. The gas density at a radius r within a star of central density Pc and outer radius R is described by: Derive an equation for the enclosed mass as a function of radius, m(r), and then find an expression for the total gravitational potential energy of this star, EGR· A3. Over what range of mass can main sequence stars exist? Explain what determines the upper and lower mass limits for stable stars. A4. What are the two main energy transport processes in stars? [4] [4] Explain the importance of the dominant energy transport mechanism for the star's structure and observed properties, and briefly discuss which stages of evolution (and regions of the star) are dominated by each process and why. [4] AS. Type II supernovae are produced when the core of a massive star collapses. Explain briefly the processes that lead to this collapse and describe the eventual result. Explain what provides the energy for the supernova explosion and how that energy is released. [4] 3 PHYS3010W1 Section B 81. (a) For a classical gas, the probability that a particle will occupy a state with energy Ep is given by 1 j( Ep) = -ex_p_(E_p___J-L_)/-(-ks-T-) where f-L is the chemical potential, ks is the Boltzmann constant, and T is the gas temperature. If the number of quantum states available between momenta of p and p+dp is given by: v g(p)dp = h3 gAnpdp write down an integral describing the total number of particles, N, within a classical gas of volume V. [3] (b) Hence show that if the particles are non-relativistic [i.e. Ep = mc 2 + p 2 /(2m)] the particle concentration n is given by the following expression: n = exp ( (Hint: The standard integral f-L- mc ksT f0 00 2 ) g h~ (2nmksT) 1 3 2 x 2 exp(-ax2 )dx = (1/4) ~may be useful.) (c) The quantum concentration is defined as _ (2nmksT) nQh2 312 Using the expression for particle concentration obtained in part (b), show that a non-degenerate gas will obey Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics: e.g. TURN OVER [4] 4 exp [(mc 2 - PHYS3010W1 Jl)/(ksT)] >> 1. [3] (d) Hence show that the chemical potential for a species A is given by [2] (e) The triple-alpha process of Helium burning involves the equilibrium reaction 4 He +4 He r= 8 Be Using the results of part (b), show that the relative concentrations of 8-beryllium and 4-helium nuclei (n 8 and n4 , respectively) in a gas of temperature T are described by n~ n4 h2 = 23/2 ( 2 k T 1rm4 B ) 3/2 exp [-Q/(ksT)] where m4 is the mass of a 4-helium nucleus, and Q is the mass-energy difference for the equilibrium reaction above, which has a value of 91.8 keV. Note that the number of spin-polarization states per momentum state is 1 for both species. [5] (f) Hence show that for a pure helium gas of density p = 4 x 108 kg m- 3 at a temperature of T = 2.5 x 108 K, there will be roughly one 8-beryllium nucleus for every 2.5 million 4-helium nuclei. [3] 5 82. PHYS3010W1 (a) Demonstrate that the minimum rotation period of a star is given by Tmin R3 ) = 27r ( GM [2] 1/2 Hence describe the most important observational evidence we have for the [2] existence of neutron stars. (b) A pulsar is observed to have a period of 89 ms, which is increasing at a rate of P = 1o- 13 , and has a moment of inertia of around I that the rate of energy loss is proportional to ww = 1038 kg m 2 . Show (where w is the angular frequency, and wits rate of change). In comparatively slow pulsars like this one, magnetic braking is thought to be the dominant spindown mechanism. Can magnetic braking of this pulsar be powering the surrounding pulsar wind nebula, which is observed to have an X-ray luminosity of Lx = 1029 W? [5] (c) The energy loss rate due to magnetic dipole radiation is proportional to w 4 (where w is the angular frequency). Hence calculate an upper limit on the [4] age of the pulsar described in part (b) (d) What is the observational evidence for the existence of stellar mass black [3] holes? (e) Interacting binary stars radiate much larger amounts of energy than can be explained by the black-body radiation of the component stars. Describe the process that provides the energy for this radiation in interacting binaries. Discuss the relative efficiency of this process for white dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes. [4] TURN OVER 6 83. PHYS3010W1 (a) When a collapsing protostar becomes radiative it enters the Henyey contraction phase, during which it is in hydrostatic equilibrium. Consider the physical properties of a protostar at a fixed fractional radius, r112 = 0.5R (where R is the star's radius). Assuming the collapse is homologous, and that the mass enclosed within r 1; 2 remains constant, show that as the protostar collapses, the pressure P(r1; 2 ) scales with the protostar's radius according to [4] (b) For the same protostar, show that the temperature and temperature gradient [3] scale with radius according to and dT ex: R-2 dr (c) During the Henyey contraction, the energy transport is radiative, and so the outward energy flux at radius r 112 obeys: where a is the radiation constant, c is the speed of light, and K(r) is the opacity at radius r. Given that the opacity scales with radius according to K(r 1; 2 ) ex: R 0·5 , show that the protostar's luminosity, L and radius R are related by L ex: R0·5 at all times during the collapse phase. (d) Hence show that during this stage of evolution the collapsing protostar will follow a path of slope -4/5 on the theoretical Hertzsprung-Russell diagram as it moves towards the main sequence, bearing in mind that the effective [4] 7 PHYS3010W1 [5] temperature does not scale homologously. (e) The protostar is in virial equilibrium through its collapse. If its volume- averaged pressure when it reaches the main sequence is ,. . ., 1.2 x 10 14 Pa, and its radius at this point is 1.3R0 , what must its mass be? [2] If the Kelvin-Helmholtz contraction stage for this star takes around 6 million [2] years, what is its average luminosity during this phase? TURN OVER 8 84. PHYS3010W1 (a) The Clayton model for stellar structure approximates the pressure gradient in a main sequence star as: where G is the Gravitational constant, Pc is the central density, r is radius within the star, and lis a scale length such that l << R, where R is the outer radius of the star. Show that in this model the pressure at a radius r is given by: [6] [Hint: the pressure at the star's surface, P(R), is zero.] (b) The total mass of the star in this model is given by: Using the expression for P(r) derived in part (a), show that the star's central pressure can be approximated by: [4] (c) Write down expressions for the (ideal) gas pressure and the radiation pressure at the centre of a star in terms of the central temperature. (d) Using the expressions from part (c), show that the central pressure of a star [2] 9 PHYS3010W1 in which both gas and radiation pressure contribute is given by: P,= [4] C;/t (P~Br Gr where f3 is the fraction of the total pressure contributed by the gas (P gas = f3Pc), ks is the Boltzmann constant, m= 1.0 x l0- 27 kg is the mean particle mass, and a = 7.566 x 10- 16 J m- 3 K is the radiation constant. (e) Using the results of parts (d) and (b), determine the main sequence mass for which the gas and radiation pressure contribute equally in the core, assuming the Clayton model is an accurate description. END OF PAPER [4]