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Transcript
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
A Star Is Born
What is the life cycle of a star?
• Stars form in nebulae.
• A nebula is a large cloud of gas and dust. It is
composed mainly of hydrogen and helium, with
small amounts of heavier elements.
• An outside force, such as the explosion of a
nearby star, may cause the nebula to contract and
cool.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a star?
• As particles within the nebula are pulled closer
together, gravitational attraction increases.
• As a result, dense regions of gas and dust form
within the nebula.
• The densest regions, called dense cores, form new
stars.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a star?
• The temperature within dense cores increases for
millions of years.
• At about 10 million °C, the process of hydrogen
nuclear fusion begins, marking the birth of a star.
• A star can remain actively fusing hydrogen into
helium for billions of years. This stage ends when
the star runs out of hydrogen.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a star?
• Nuclear fusion happens in three steps.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a star?
• When nearly all the hydrogen in a star’s core has
fused into helium, the core contracts under its
own gravity and its temperature rises.
• Energy is transferred to a thin shell of hydrogen
surrounding the core, where hydrogen fusion
continues and the shell expands.
• When fusion ends completely, the star begins to
eject matter, until only the core remains.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
The Lightweights
What is the life cycle of a low-mass
star?
• The outward pressure generated by a star’s fusion
reaction is in balance with the inward gravitational
pull.
• When the active fusion stage ends, these forces
are no longer in balance, and the star’s outer
atmosphere expands.
• The gases in the outer shell grow cooler, and the
star is much larger and glows red. These large red
stars are called giants.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a low-mass
star?
• Giant stars shine brightly because of their large
surface areas.
• Giants are at least 10 times the size of the sun.
• Low-mass stars, which contain about as much
mass as the sun, will become red giants.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a low-mass
star?
• Over time, a giant’s outer gases drift away, and
the remaining core collapses, becoming denser
and very hot.
• A white dwarf is the hot, dense core of matter
that remains from the collapse of a low-mass star.
It is about the size of Earth.
• White dwarfs shine for billions of years, becoming
fainter as they cool. This is the final stage in the
life cycle of low-mass stars.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a low-mass
star?
• How does a low-mass star become a giant and
then a white dwarf?
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
The Heavyweights
What is the life cycle of a high-mass
star?
• When hydrogen fusion in a high-mass star ends,
other types of fusion begin, producing elements
heavier than carbon.
• The star expands to become a supergiant.
• A star with 10 times the mass of our sun will
become a supergiant in just 20 million years.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a high-mass
star?
• In the supergiant stage, the high-mass star fuses
larger and larger nuclei until all its nuclear fuel is
used up.
• The core then rapidly collapses and heats up. This
halts the collapse, and the supergiant becomes a
supernova.
• A supernova is a gigantic explosion in which a
high-mass star collapses, throwing its outer layers
into space. But its core remains.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a high-mass
star?
• Compare the sizes of the sun and a high-mass
star.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a high-mass
star?
• As the core of a supernova continues to collapse,
its protons and electrons smash together to form
neutrons.
• The resulting neutron star is a small, incredibly
dense ball of closely packed neutrons.
• Neutron stars rotate very rapidly. Some emit a
rotating beam of electromagnetic radiation. These
stars are called pulsars.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a high-mass
star?
• Some supergiants are so massive that their cores
are unable to stop collapsing under the force of
gravity.
• As the core collapses, the mass of the star is
compressed into a single point, which is called a
black hole.
• A black hole is an invisible object with gravity so
great that nothing, not even light, can escape it.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
What is the life cycle of a high-mass
star?
• Although black holes are invisible, they can be
observed by the gravitational effect they have on
their surroundings.
• Matter swirls around a black hole just before being
pulled in. The matter becomes so hot that it emits
X-rays.
• Astronomers use X-rays and other means to
locate black holes, even within our own galaxy.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
A Graphic Display
How are stars plotted on the H-R
diagram?
• Astronomers refer to brightness as luminosity.
Luminosity is a measure of the total amount of
energy a star gives off each second.
• When the surface temperatures of stars are
plotted against their luminosity, a consistent
pattern is revealed.
• The graph that illustrates this pattern is called the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, or H-R diagram.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
How are stars plotted on the H-R
diagram?
• The hottest stars are located on the left side of
the H-R diagram and are blue.
• The coolest stars are located on the right side of
the diagram and are red.
• The brightest stars are located at the top of the
diagram, and the dimmest stars are located at the
bottom.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
How does the H-R diagram show
different life cycle stages?
• The temperature and luminosity of most stars fall
within a band that runs diagonally through the
middle of the H-R diagram.
• This band, called the main sequence, is the
region of the diagram where stars spend most of
their lives.
• Stars within this band are actively fusing
hydrogen and are called main-sequence stars.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
How does the H-R diagram show
different life cycle stages?
• The sun is a main-sequence star.
• When nuclear fusion ends in the sun, it will
become a giant and will move to the upper right
quadrant of the H-R diagram.
• When the outer layers of the giant are lost to
space, the sun will become a white dwarf and
move to the lower left quadrant of the diagram.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
How does the H-R diagram show
different life cycle stages?
• Locate the positions of the brightest stars and the
coolest stars on the diagram.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company