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Journal 3/1/17 Why do you think God made other stars besides the sun? Objective Tonight’s Homework To learn about how stars die and explode p 514: review 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 11 Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution When a star fuses elements, this energy creates a pressure. This pressure is what pushes outwards, keeping everything from simply collapsing down and crushing the core of the star. As long as we have nuclear fusion pushing out, our star can fight off gravity. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution So when a star like the sun runs out of hydrogen to fuse, the core will temporarily shut down. For a little while, the entire star starts to slowly crush down, putting more and more pressure on the core. The good news is that this makes the core hotter. Hot enough, in fact, to start fusing helium into lithium. This new fusion suddenly gives the core pressure to push out again. At least, until the star runs out of helium… This process can keep going until we reach iron. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution But iron is special. In the graph below, we’re seeing something called “binding energy”. This is a measure of how much energy is stored in the nucleus of an atom. On the left is fusion. This is where we smash atoms together and they release some of this “binding energy” stuff as they merge. On the right is fission. This is where we rip an atom apart and binding energy comes out as our atom rips. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution Right at the top of the graph is iron. Iron is special. It doesn’t release any binding energy when smashed together with other atoms, and it doesn’t release binding energy when torn apart. In fact, there’s nothing you can do to iron that will give you more energy back than you had to use in the first place. This is where stars get in trouble. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution When a star’s core reaches iron and stops fusing, we start getting everything collapsing down like before. But no amount of new heat or pressure will let it do any more fusion. This is when the star will explode. But we’ll get to that in a second. The sun is only going to have enough pressure to get to the point where it fuses carbon. After it stops, the rest of the sun collapsing down just isn’t hot enough to let it do more fusion. So what happens next? This is where it gets a bit odd. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution While the sun is still trying to fuse stuff a few steps below carbon, the outer layers start getting hotter (due to some complex stuff). As they get hotter, they start to puff up, making the sun way bigger but way less dense. Expanding gasses cool, so this hotter stuff cools down pretty quickly. This leaves us with a star that’s now way bigger but also way cooler (on the outside). At this point, our star has become a Red Giant. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution For reference, here’s how big the sun will get. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution If a star has less than 9 times the mass of the sun, it’s going to stop before iron and die like ours, with something we call a “nova”. When the middle reaches carbon and can’t fuse any more, it shuts down. All those puffed up layers drift off into space and we’re left with a tiny, white-hot core of carbon just sitting there. This is a “white dwarf”. All the stuff that puffs off into space forms a planetary nebula. But what about the big stars? Notes on Novae and Supernovae Supernovae are violent. This happens in the last dying stage for a giant star. As this star dies, it has a number of shells, each one fusing a different element. The problem is in the core, where we’ve reached iron. Since iron can’t fuse, the pressure holding up the star in the center is about to collapse. Notes on Novae and Supernovae When the core collapses, it’s fast. Really fast. We’ve seen in astronomy that most things seem to take millions of years. The actual collapse of the core takes 1 second. As the core is collapsing, the outer layers stop expanding and get pulled back in. The inner layers bounce off the iron core in a series of collisions, and the whole thing explodes out in the most violent way possible. Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution As the star explodes, it makes unimaginable heat. This creates all the elements heavier than iron. And this is the only way they’re made. To summarize this – the only way to get elements heavier than iron is through a supernova. Gold comes from exploded stars! Extra Notes on Stellar Evolution This supernova is so bright and violent that for about an hour the star outshines the rest of the entire galaxy it’s part of. Notes on Novae and Supernovae Here’s a few facts about this kind of explosion: - It releases 1046 Joules of energy over 10 seconds. This could completely disintegrate the sun 100,000 times over. This is as much energy as 400 billion suns can put out in 5 billion years! Or in other words, its as much energy as our entire galaxy has made for 1/3 of the life of the entire universe! - The outer core implodes at about 23% the speed of light. So fast that time and space start to bend. - The iron core can get as hot as 100 billion K. This is 10,000 times hotter than the core of the sun! Exit Question When the sun dies, it will leave behind a core of… Hydrogen Helium Calcium Iron Creamy nougat None of the above