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How do stars form? The Nebular Hypothesis Observations • Stars can be seen in various stages of formation. • Stars seem to have been forming continuously since the formation of the Universe. • Star formation continues today. • Observations synthesized into the Nebular Hypothesis. Our Sun: an example of stellar evolution • Our Sun began as a nebula, approximately 5 billion years ago. • A nebula is an enormous cloud of gasses (mainly Hydrogen) and dust • Nebula may become disturbed by shock waves, for example from a nearby supernova. Example of a nebula Nebula begins to contract • As the molecules of gas and dust move closer together, they experience stronger gravitational attraction. • Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation • Fg = g(m1m2)/d2 • Most mass concentrates at the center as the nebula contracts. Nebula begins to take a more definite shape. Shape becomes spherical with equatorial disk Will a star form? • If mass is sufficient, gravity at the center of the sphere may be great enough to “squash” atoms together. • 4 H atoms are fused to form 1 He atom in a nuclear reaction (not chemical). • Nuclear reaction is nuclear fusion, which releases tremendous energy. • A star is born! Stable stars • Radiant energy produced by fusion causes the star to expand. • Gravity holds the star together. • Gas pressure/radiant energy is balanced by gravity, so the star is stable. • The Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram shows these stars as the main sequence. The H-R Diagram Another version of the H-R Diagram H-R Diagram • Shows relationships among size, temperature and brightness (luminosity or magnitude). • Larger, stable stars are hotter and brighter. • Large, hot stars burn out faster than smaller, cooler stars. Stellar Evolution and the H-R Diagram • What happens when a star exhausts its nuclear fuel? • Depends on size • Star core collapses on itself, but heats the outer envelope. • Result may be: White dwarf, white dwarf with planetary nebula, red giant, neutron star or black hole. Stellar collapse • May result in gravitational heating and eventual burnout. • May result in renewed fusion (He is fused this time). • Collapse may produce explosion (supernova). • Remnant of supernova may be a neutron star or a black hole. Products of fusion • H is fused to form He • He is fused to form C and other, heavier chemical elements. • Heavier elements are recycled into new nebulae, and/or new stars and planets. • Implication? Heavy Elements • Since all elements heavier than H are produced by fusion in stars, • We are made of Stardust !!! Summary: Nebular Hypothesis So what happened to the disk? • The disk that surrounds the central star may • 1) be swallowed as the star initially expands. • 2) remain as a disk or a series of rings • 3) may form planets that orbit the central star. Our Solar System • Sun began to radiate energy about 5 billion years ago. • Surrounding disk condensed into 9 (possibly 8) planets and an asteroid belt. • Earth is one of those nine planets. • Earth condensed approximately 4.6 billion years ago. How do we know the timing? • Age of Sun via chemical composition and known rate of fusion: about 5 Ga • Oldest Earth rock: 3.98 Ga • Age of oldest Moon Rocks: 4.2 Ga • Age of Meteorites: 4.5 Ga • Ga = Giga-annum = billion years