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Download Main-sequence stage Stellar lifetimes
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Main-sequence stage • e.g. the Sun: ‘envelope’ Convective zone Radiative zone ‘core’ Tcore ~ 1.5x107 K P core ~ 1011 atm P surface ~ 0 Fusion H -> He • At Tcore, λmax ~ 0.1 nm -- hence γ-ray, X-ray photons ( + neutrinos). • Photons diffuse outward slowly ( ~ 106 years) through radiative zone; energy transport by convection in outer 0.2 R. • In high-mass stars, energy transport by convection in inner part, by radiation in outer part. The Galaxy AS 1001 Stellar lifetimes • H is the most abundant element – Hence this energy source lasts longest. – More massive stars are much more luminous (L ∼ M3.5 to 4.0), i.e. energy output is much greater. – Less massive stars, less luminous – Lifetimes: t ms = Fuel Energy use " M L – e.g. ! Mass Luminosity Main-sequence time (M) (L) (106 years) 25 3 1 0.5 8x104 80 1 0.06 3 300 8000 80000 The Galaxy AS 1001 Page ‹#› The HR Diagram • Very important for stellar evolution. – describes the evolution of a single star, a group or a population of stars. 100 Red Luminosity giants L / L 1 White dwarfs Main sequence 1/100 30,000 6,000 Temperature Teff (K) 3,000 • Stars prefer specific combinations of Teff and L. – – – – e.g. the main-sequence, giants, white-dwarf regions. other regions empty of stars, or nearly so. either : stars never have such (Teff, L) combinations, or : they do so only for a short time relative to stellar lifetime. The Galaxy AS 1001 The “human HR diagram” • cf. analogous diagram for humans: Height (m) 2 Adult (most time) teens 1 child 40 Weight (kg) 80 • All stars spend most time as main-sequence stars, with fusion reaction H -> He providing energy. • Then they change fairly quickly to become other types of stars. The Galaxy AS 1001 Page ‹#› To red giants and beyond • As H is exhausted in core: – fusion stops so pressure support decreases – core contracts, releasing gravitational PE. – An H -> He fusion shell source around the core provides energy as well. • As core contracts, the outer parts expand from ~ 1 R up to ~ 1 AU in size. • Transition stage: – Low-mass stars (~ 1 M) ~ 109 years, via subgiants . – High-mass stars (> 5 M) ~ 105 years, quickly! • Hence for an old (~109 y) group of stars, see continuous line from MS, through subgiants, to giants. • For a young (~107 y) group of stars, may see gap between MS and giants -- the Hertzsprung Gap . – cf. the CM diagrams of open and globular clusters. The Galaxy AS 1001 Fusion in red giants • At the red-giant stage, new core fusion processes start: He -> C and C + He -> O – Requires Tcore ~ 108 K – Can last up to ~20% of MS time – Star still has (weak) H -> He shell source as well • Low-mass stars become horizontal-branch stars at this stage. • High-mass stars move in blue-red-blue-red loops upwards in supergiant stars. • Theoretical isochrones (equal-time lines) and ages of star clusters. The Galaxy AS 1001 Page ‹#› Pulsating stars • Stars with particular structures can become mildly unstable , so that they pulsate - the surface of the stars alternately expands and contracts radially. • Pulsation occurs in a particular region of the HR -the instability strip. – High-mass stars: the classical Cepheids are yellow supergiant stars. – Low-mass stars: the RR Lyrae variables are white horizontalbranch stars – Type II Cepheids are also low-mass stars. The Galaxy AS 1001 End states of stars - I • White dwarfs / neutron stars / black holes • Low-mass stars: – At end of core He fusion, still have shell sources of H and He fusion. – Star returns to red as an asymptotic giant-branch (AGB) star. – Core cannot become hot enough for further fusion. – Within 104 to 105 years, star moves through the envelope ejection phase -the planetary nebula stage. – Leaves the remnant core: a hot white dwarf object with mass < 1.4 M – Typically M ~ 0.6 M, R ~ 0.01 R, surface temperature ~ 100,000 K at first. – Long-lived stage (> 109 years) with star cooling down at a constant radius. Cat’s Eye Nebula (HST) Planetary Nebula The Galaxy AS 1001 Page ‹#› End states of stars - II • High-mass stars (now > 8 M): – Only inner core hot enough for further fusion. – Sources rapidly become more scarce. e.g. 25 M: Reaction Timescale Central core temperature (K) C -> Mg, Ne 600 years 0.6 x 109 Ne -> O 1 year 0.6 x 109 O -> Si 6 months 0.6 x 109 Si -> Fe 1 day 2.7 x 109 – No further nuclear fusion sources. Hence: – Core collapses in seconds; central T rises again; γ-rays photodissociate 56Fe into 4He nuclei, then into protons and electrons. – As densities rise, p + e– neutrons + neutrinos – Neutron-rich matter compresses to density ~ 1017 kg m–3 and stops further collapse. The Galaxy AS 1001 Supernova! • Following core collapse: – Star’s inner regions collapse on to compressed core. – They are then ejected together with the neutrinos out through the star to produce a supernova event. – > 90% of star’s mass may be ejected into interstellar space. – Energy released ~ 1043 J ! – Most likely remnant is a neutron star -- mass ~ 1.5 M typically, radius ~ 15 kilometres ! – If remnant is massive enough (> 3 M ) then it will become a black hole -- a singularity in space. – Black : no light can escape! – Hole : if you fall in, you can’t get out! The Galaxy AS 1001 Page ‹#› Supernova 1987A • • • • SN Type I: White dwarfs in binary systems SN Type II Core collapse of M* > 8M 24 February 1987: Brightest SN in 400 years SN Type II in Large Magellanic Cloud, 170 thousand light years from Earth. • Blue supergiant called Sanduleak -69 202 AS 1001 The Galaxy AS 1001 The Galaxy Page ‹#› AS 1001 The Galaxy AS 1001 The Galaxy Page ‹#› HST View of Supernova 1987A Central ring from previous mass loss from progenitor star. Ionized by light from SN explosion, glows brightly But material from explosion should eventually hit ring and start brightening again… The Galaxy AS 1001 The ring is starting to brighten again due to SN debris hitting it. Fireworks over next few years… The Galaxy AS 1001 Page ‹#› SN1987a in 2003 The Galaxy AS 1001 SN1987a: 1994-2003 The Galaxy AS 1001 Page ‹#›