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Download Goal: To understand how stars form.
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Goal: To understand how stars form. Objectives: 1) To learn about the properties for the initial gas cloud for 1 star. 2) To understand the collapse and evolution of the gas cloud. 3) To understand how this evolution leads to Stellar clusters. How do stars form? • Before we dive in all the way, lets see what you already know. • Turn to a neighbor and discuss what you think you know about the formation of stars. In the beginning • All you have is a large cloud of dust and gas. • This cloud is very large and very cold. • They are called Giant Molecular Clouds. • Somehow (more on this later on in the lecture) the cloud collapses. Then… • A small part of the gas cloud collapses to form the starting solar nebula. • What is this cloud mostly made of (what materials)? The initial cloud • Is made of mostly Hydrogen (~90% by weight). • Most of the rest is Helium (9%) • 1-2% are everything else (in Astronomy we call the everything else “metals” including Oxygen). • The cloud has some spin. What will that do? Spin city • The small amount of spin acts like a merry-go-round. • Much like on a merry-go-round, this spinning motion pushes things outward. • However, nothing stops the collapse in the vertical direction, so the cloud collapses to a disk. • The gas in the disk is literally in orbit around the center of the gas cloud. And then, something special happens • In the core of this bit of cloud, there are a lot of particles falling into the center (everything not lucky enough to start orbiting). • This creates heat from the kinetic energy of the infalling materials. • NOTE: kinetic energy is the energy of motion. If something stops moving, that energy has to go somewhere. In collisions like this it goes into heat! • At some point the central object starts to radiate this newly acquired heat and becomes a protostar. Protostar • A protostar is a newly forming star. • It generates its energy from gravitational collapse and not from nuclear fusion like an adult star. • Eventually, the pressure and density at the core of this protostar increase. This increases the collisions of particles at its core. • This causes the core to heat up quickly. It’s a girl! • Eventually something amazing happens. • The core gets so hot and so dense that fusion begins! • The star is now born! Meanwhile • The birth of the star results in a lot of debris. • This debris will form the planets, asteroids, comets, ect. • All of this happens in a fairly short period of time Astronomically speaking. How long do you think this process took to form our sun (and planets)? How long do you think this process took to form our sun (and planets)? • It took about 10 million years. A very short time compared to the 4.5 billion years of age that the earth and sun are currently. • If a star was more massive, would it take a longer time or a shorter time to form? If a star was more massive, would it take a longer time or a shorter time to form? • The seemingly obvious answer would be the more massive star would take longer. • HOWEVER, with more mass means more gravity. • More gravity means the collapse occurs much faster. • As we will see again and again, the bigger the star, the faster it does everything. • So, stars bigger than the sun form FASTER than the sun. • Similarly, stars smaller than the sun take longer to form. Multiple star systems • Sometimes you get more than 1 star to form in the same part of space. • These stars form in orbit around each other. • What fraction of stars do you think end up in multiple systems? Multiple star systems • Are very common. At least 50% of all star systems are multiple star systems (2 or more stars). • So, our sun is actually the exception to the rule. It doesn’t stop there • When you form stars you don’t form them one system at a time. • The starting Giant Molecular Cloud is often 10 to 100 light years across. • The mass of these clouds are tens of thousands of times more than the mass of our sun. • So…. So…. • You form stars in clusters. • You form thousands of stars all at once. • Later in the course we will examine how these clusters evolve. • What makes these clouds collapse? Collapse mechanisms • 1) Local supernova – however you need to form a star to do that. • 2) Collision with another cloud of gas – this usually happens when 2 galaxies collide. • 3) Spiral arm – probably the most common. • You get a spiral density wave that shocks the gas cloud. That causes it to collapse – much like sending a seismic wave through an old house make the house collapse. But? • Um, if that cloud collapses, why do we get so many stars. • Well again because of the spin when the cloud collapses, it breaks into pieces. • Imagine a ice skater with arms 100 light years long. • What happens when that skater pulls in their arms? Rotation • The spin becomes so great that the cloud has to break into pieces. • Sort of like spawning a tornado out of a larger rotating storm system. • This is what leads to lots of star systems. Conclusion • We form stars systems in groups, and most star systems are themselves groups of stars. • Spin causes the multiple systems as well as the planets. • Formation times compared to lives of stars are very short and larger stars form FASTER than smaller stars.