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Lecture 15: Star formation and the ISM Astronomy 111 Wednesday October 19, 2016 Reminders • Homework #7 due Monday ASTR111 Lecture 15 Star Birth • Where do stars come from? • How do stars form? ASTR111 Lecture 15 Stars are very far apart! • Although they look close together in the night sky, stars are very far apart from each other – Remember that the next closest star to the Sun is 4.3 light-years – That’s 25 trillion miles! • What is in all that space? ASTR111 Lecture 15 Interstellar medium • ISM is the stuff between stars • Composition (by mass) – 75% Hydrogen – 23% Helium – 2% Heavy metals – Also has some dust (about 1%) ASTR111 Lecture 15 Interstellar medium • How much is there? • The density of the ISM is only 1 atom/cm3 • Earth’s atmosphere has a density of 2.5x1019 molecules/cm3! ASTR111 Lecture 15 Dust • Tiny particles in the ISM made of “heavy elements” – Iron, silicon, carbon • The half of ISM that is not in the form of hydrogen and helium is dust ASTR111 Lecture 15 Sky: Optical ASTR111 Lecture 15 Sky: Infrared ASTR111 Lecture 15 In-class assignment • Dust absorbs light from stars and reradiates it like a blackbody with a temperature of T=10-100K • Use Wien’s law max 2,900,000 nm T to calculate the range of wavelengths of peak emission of dust in the Universe • What instrument would best be used to study this emission? ASTR111 Lecture 15 Blackbody spectrum of dust ASTR111 Lecture 15 Glowing dust Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) 3.3, 4.7, 12, and 23 micron composite image ASTR111 Lecture 15 Glowing dust Dust glows when it absorbs light and re-radiates as heat ASTR111 Lecture 15 Glowing dust ASTR111 Lecture 15 Interstellar clouds • Regions of cool, dense gas are called “clouds” – Usually have T~100K • Even cooler, denser regions are called “molecular clouds” – T~10K – Lots of dust and molecular hydrogen • These clouds hold together in space because they are self-gravitating ASTR111 Lecture 15 Barnard 68 Molecular clouds Horsehead nebula Rosette nebula ASTR111 Lecture 15 Where are stars formed? ASTR111 Lecture 15 Where are stars formed? • Stars are formed deep within molecular clouds • If a molecular cloud is massive enough, it will collapse through its self-gravity • Gravitational collapse is balanced by – – – – Outward pressure from heat within the cloud Conservation of angular momentum Turbulence within the cloud Magnetic fields ASTR111 Lecture 15 How are stars formed? ASTR111 Lecture 15 How are stars formed? • The collapse of a molecular cloud is relatively slow and complicated • The molecular cloud will fragment as it collapses, resulting in multiple knots of dense gas Computer simulation of star formation during collapse of a molecular cloud: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YbdwTwB8jtc ASTR111 Lecture 15 How are stars formed? ASTR111 Lecture 15 How are stars formed? • Collapse of these knots is much like the formation of a planetary system • The collapsed material forms an accretion disk around a protostar • The protostar may eventually form a planetary system ASTR111 Lecture 15 A star is born ASTR111 Lecture 15 A star is born ASTR111 Lecture 15 A star is born ASTR111 Lecture 15 Disks and jets ASTR111 Lecture 15 From protostar to star • The protostar begins to gravitationally collapse • Material from the molecular cloud falls on it, adding energy to its collapse • This raises the temperature ASTR111 Lecture 15 From protostar to star • Eventually the interior gets hot enough to begin fusing hydrogen into helium • The protostar becomes a main sequence star ASTR111 Lecture 15 From protostar to star Evolving onto the Main Sequence ASTR111 Lecture 15 ASTR111 Lecture 15 Stellar mass range • Massive stars are rare • Many more low-mass stars (M<Msun) ASTR111 Lecture 15 Summary • Interstellar medium contains gas and dust • Cool clouds within the ISM can gravitationally collapse to form stars • A protostar will heat up as it collapses • This heat will cause the protostar to begin fusing hydrogen into helium, which is when it becomes a main-sequence star ASTR111 Lecture 15