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If we know that a group of stars are at the same distance we can plot the following two parameters in place of Luminosity and Temperature on the H-R diagram a) Period and luminosity b) Surface gravity and color c) Brightness and color d) Diameter and brightness e) None of the above Stars come in all sizes… • L vs T b= L 4 "d 2 b=brightness, d=distance away ! 2.9 #106 K " nm T= ! 1 Magnitude vs color If two stars are on the main sequence, and one is more luminous than the other, we can be sure that the a) more luminous star will have the longer lifetime b) fainter star is the more massive c) more luminous star is the more massive d) more luminous star will have the redder color 2 Massive stars burn brighter Stellar Evolution – Models and Observation • Stars change very little over a human lifespan, so it is impossible to follow a single star from birth to death. • We observe stars at various stages of evolution, and can piece together a description of the evolution of stars in general • Computer models provide a “fast-forward” look at the evolution of stars. • Stars begin as clouds of gas and dust, which collapse to form a stellar disk. This disk eventually becomes a star. • The star eventually runs out of nuclear fuel and dies. The manner of its death depends on its mass. 3 Preview: Evolution of low-mass stars Preview: Evolution of high-mass stars 4 • • • • Tracking changes with the HR Diagram As a star evolves, its temperature and luminosity change. We can follow a stars evolution on the HR diagram. Lower mass stars move on to the main sequence, stay for a while, and eventually move through giant stages before becoming white dwarfs Higher mass stars move rapidly off the main sequence and into the giant stages, eventually exploding in a supernova Stellar Evolution Before…..During……and After…. The Main Sequence It’s all about gravity…… 5 Protostars • Once a dense core forms in the disk, the system has entered the protostar stage • Protostars are difficult to find – they are shrouded by gas and dust • Infrared telescopes can detect them. The Eagle Nebula Protostars 6 Tracking the birth of stars Protostar •Gravitational contraction •heats to thousands of K •Huge! Hundreds of times the sun •Thousands of times the surface area •Much more luminous than the sun From Protostar to Star • Low-mass protostars become stars very slowly – Weaker gravity causes them to contract slowly, so they heat up gradually – Weaker gravity requires low-mass stars to compress their cores more to get hot enough for fusion – Low-mass stars have higher density! • High-mass protostars become stars relatively quickly – They contract quickly due to stronger gravity – Core becomes hot enough for fusion at a lower density – High-mass stars are less dense! 7 The birth tracks of lowand high-mass stars Star •Gravitational contraction reaches hot enough for fusion •0.08 M sun •88 M Jupiter • smaller > Brown dwarf •Upper limit ~ 100Msun Two Young Star Clusters How do we know these clusters are young? 8 Stellar Evolution on the Main Sequence Stellar Evolution on the Main Sequence 9 The Main-Sequence Lifetime of a Star High-mass stars 10 mpg Low-mass stars 60 mpg • The length of time a star spends fusing hydrogen into helium is called its main sequence lifetime – – – – – Stars spend most of their lives on the main sequence Lifetime depends on the star’s mass and luminosity More luminous stars burn their energy more rapidly than less luminous stars. High-mass stars are more luminous than low-mass stars High mass stars are therefore shorter-lived! • Cooler, smaller red stars have been around for a long time • Hot, blue stars are relatively young. What determines when a star becomes a main-sequence star? a) When nuclear fusion generates the energy required to balance gravity b) When convection begins in the core. c) When optical radiation leaves the star d) When the temperature in the core reaches a higher temperature than the corona. 10 Stellar Evolution on the Main Sequence High-mass stars Low-mass stars Evolution to red giant phase Fuel runs out Core pressure drops Gravity compresses core Core temperature rises Shell burning Pressure puffs outer layers Core heats up more Shell burning grows stronger Atmosphere expands and cools further • The star is expanding and cooling, so its luminosity increases while its temperature decreases • Position on the HR diagram shifts up and to the right… 11 Evolutionary tracks of giant stars A (temporary) new lease on life • The triple-alpha process provides a new energy source for giant stars • Their temperatures increase temporarily, until the helium runs out • The stars cool, and expand once again • The end is near… 12