* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Document
Astrophysical X-ray source wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear drip line wikipedia , lookup
Astronomical spectroscopy wikipedia , lookup
Standard solar model wikipedia , lookup
White dwarf wikipedia , lookup
Planetary nebula wikipedia , lookup
Nucleosynthesis wikipedia , lookup
Hayashi track wikipedia , lookup
Star formation wikipedia , lookup
Stellar Evolution • Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) Diagram: A graph plot indicating individual stars as points, with stellar luminosity on the vertical axis & surface temperature (spectral type) on the horizontal axis • We can use spectroscopy to determine the spectral type & luminosity of a star • Main Sequence (MS): Prominent line of points running from the upper left to lower right on an HR Diagram; these stars shine by fusing hydrogen in their core • For the Main Sequence ! Mass increases from right to left along the MS ! Most stars have low mass ! High-mass stars have short MS lives; low mass stars have long MS lives Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram or ColorMagnitude Diagram Increasing mass Stars stay on the main sequence most of Their lives, burning H to He i.e., Temperature Spectral Types Blue Red Surface gravity, g, sets the Pressure Gradient of Atmosphere g = G M / R2 Emission/Absorption Features Associated with Different S.T.s Spectral Sequence Stellar radii on HR Diagram Luminosity Class • • • • • I = Supergiants II = Bright Giants III = Giants IV = subgiants V = dwarfs (Main Sequence) Initial Mass Function • IMF, ! (M) = distribution in mass of freshly formed stars • Form 1: Salpeter IMF ! (M) " M-2.35 • Form 2: Scalo IMF For M # 0.2 Msun. ! (M) " M-2.45 for M > 10 Msun. ! (M) " M-3.27 for 1 Msun > M > 10 Msun. ! (M) " M-1.83 for M < 0.2Msun. • I.e., there are lots of low-mass stars & very few high-mass stars Different Mass Stars Follow Different Tracks Along this Diagram MS masses & lifetimes Estimating Lifetimes on the Main Sequence • Recall that, for the Sun, the H-burning lifetime is • The more generic expression is 10 MSolar Star – 107 years 2 MSolar Star – 109 years 1 MSolar Star – 1010 years Stars spend most of their lives on the MS • For the horizontal branch, the luminosity of a star is LHB = 50 Lsun • During a star’s life on the HB, it converts M(He core) = 0.45 Msun into O & C • About 0.5 of the He " O & the other 0.5 He " C • Thus, Pressure • There are three sources of pressure in a star: • Normal gas pressure - • Radiation Pressure • Electron Degeneracy Pressure Electron Degeneracy 1) Pauli Exclusion Principle: No two electrons can have exactly the same set of quantum numbers 2) It is impossible to define the position & momentum of a particle to an accuracy better than Planck’s constant, h. I.e., if !x & !px are the uncertainties in the position & momentum of a particle, respectively, then • Pressure arises from the random motions of particles. Thus, for electrons, even if the temperature is 0 K, they still have motion resulting from quantum mechanical effects (& !px different by at least h/!x such as not to violate the exclusion principle), especially if #x is small Electron Degeneracy • To get an idea of where the pressure expression comes from, rewrite the idea gas law as • where vx and px are the mean x velocity & momentum of electrons, respectively. Thus, Electron Degeneracy • Given the condition of charge neutrality, n+ ion per unit volume with atomic number Z & weight µ and ne electrons per unit volume • The density is • And thus, Evolutionary Tracks Life of a Low-Mass Star 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) Fusion of hydrogen into helium Core hydrogen ends, star collapses, hydrogen fusion begins in outer shell Core continues to collapse, outer shell expands because of hydrogen fusion, star becomes luminous Core becomes degenerate (sustained by electron pressure), outer shell dumps helium ash onto core Helium flash! Helium fusion (into carbon) begins in core Core helium fusion ends, eventually leading to both hydrogen & helium fusion shells & a degenerate carbon core End results ! outer layers drift away (planetary nebula), leaving a naked core (white dwarf) Life Track of 1 Solar Mass Star Example of a Planetary Nebula Life Cycle of a Massive Star 1) 2) 3) 4) Successive episodes of shell fusion occur, leading up to a degenerate iron core Iron is unlike other elements in that no energy is released through fusion or fission Thus, core continues to accrete iron ash until degeneracy is finally broken Supernova may result in part from: ! core bounce associated with collapse into a neutron star ! release of neutrinos ($) which deposit energy into the dense outer envelopes of the star (i.e, p+ + e- ! no + $) The importance of Iron (Fe) Nucleus sufficiently small for strong force to overcome coulomb repulsion Massive star core near end of life Time for massive star to go supernova • • 1.4 Msun of H " Fe before exploding So, the mass of a Fe56 ~ 55.5 & H = 1, so, the efficiency is, • And thus, • If L3 x 103 Lsun, then, Elements heavier than Fe56 • Are built through the s- & r-processes. • The slow-process occurs as neutrons bombard & combine with heavy nuclei at a rate < the time for beta decay if the isotope formed is unstable • The rapid-process occurs as neutron bombard & combine with heavy nuclei at a rate much faster than the beta decay timescale. Free neutrons exist in large quantity during a supernova event Supernova Remnant More comments on abundances • H, He, Li, Be, B - primordial ratios • C, N, O, Fe - stellar nucleosynthesis • Th, U - stellar nucleosynthesis, but must have formed very recently Remnants: condensed matter • For Mstar < 8 Msolar " white dwarf Leftover after much mass loss MWD " 0.55 – 0.6 Msolar Typical Radius = 107 m (about Earth size) • For 8 Msolar $ Mstar $ 60 Msolar " neutron star Optically invisible, but visible as radio pulsars MNS " 1.4 Msolar Typical Radius = 104 m (a little taller than Mt Everest) • For Mstar > 60 Msolar " Black Hole Optically invisible MBH > 1.4 Msolar Radius = 2GM /c2 Remnants: radius - mass relation • Recall that, for a degenerate (non-relativistic) core, • And the central pressure of a star is, • Equating the two gives • I.e., the volume of degenerate objects like a white dwarf is inversely proportional to the mass Remnants: Some numbers - Density • Density of a white dwarf ~ 106 g cm-3. One sugarcube-size piece of WD matter would weigh more than a car • Density of a neutron star ~ 2x1014 g cm-3. One sugarcube-size piece of neutron matter would weigh as much as the total human population of the Earth. Note that, for a neutron, I.e., in a neutron star, the neutrons are almost touching. Remants: some numbers - escape velocity • Escape velocity of a white dwarf - • Escape velocity of a neutron star - • Escape velocity of a black holes = c Remnants: Final observation • Stars ending their lives as white dwarfs & neutron stars have their fate determined by quantum mechanics (degeneracy) • Stars ending as black holes have their fate determined by gravity