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D. Cutts Barus-Holley 522 [email protected] Physics 220 Astronomy NGC 6369 “Little Ghost Nebula” in constellation Ophiucus March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 original lecture slides were lost 1 The slides for this lecture were lost. Some appear in Lecture 14, which reviews the end stages of stars (covered first in this lecture) before discussing neutron stars. Topics: pulsating stars: Cepheid variables: Period vs. luminosity relation close binary star systems, Roche lobes and mass transfer stellar evolution off the Main Sequence (after core H fusion ends) M between 0.4 and 4 solar masses: shell H fusion > He flash > core He fusion red giant > planetary nebula and white dwarfs; Chandrasekhar limit M between 4 & 8 solar masses: core C fusion M > 8 solar masses: becomes red supergiant, multiple layers of fusion in shells until iron core >> core-collapse supernova [Types Ib, Ic or II] ( 99% of energy as neutrinos) remnant core: neutron star or black hole (dep. on mass) white dwarfs in close binary systems: can accrete matter > flash of C fusion in core (w. dwarf) explodes in “thermonuclear” supernova (Type Ia) - no remnant core! March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 2 Announcements: today: Chapter 20 – the end stages after a star leaves the MS Next week: Chapter 21 (Neutron Stars) and Chapter 22 (Black Holes) Most of the 2011 lecture was given w/o powerpoint (some 2011 slides follow) Showed the video Death of a Star, which describes the observation of the supernova SN1987a March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 3 March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 4 March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 5 March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 6 March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 7 March 17, 2012 Physics 220 Lecture 13 8