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Transcript
12.2 Life as a Low-Mass Star
• Our Goals for Learning
• What are the life stages of a low-mass star?
• How does a low-mass star die?
What are the life stages of a low
mass star?
High-Mass Stars
> 8 MSun
IntermediateMass Stars
Low-Mass Stars
< 2 MSun
Brown Dwarfs
A star remains
on the main
sequence as
long as it can
fuse hydrogen
into helium in
its core
Life stages
of a lowmass star
like the Sun
Thought Question
What happens when a star can no longer fuse
hydrogen to helium in its core?
A.
B.
C.
D.
Core cools off
Core shrinks and heats up
Core expands and heats up
Helium fusion immediately begins
Thought Question
What happens when a star can no longer fuse
hydrogen to helium in its core?
A.
B.
C.
D.
Core cools off
Core shrinks and heats up
Core expands and heats up
Helium fusion immediately begins
Helium fusion requires higher temperatures than hydrogen
fusion because larger charge leads to greater repulsion
Fusion of two helium nuclei doesn’t work, so helium fusion
must combine three He nuclei to make carbon
Thought Question
What happens as a star’s inert helium core starts to
shrink?
A.
B.
C.
D.
Hydrogen fuses in shell around core
Helium fusion slowly begins
Helium fusion rate rapidly rises
Core pressure sharply drops
Thought Question
What happens as a star’s inert helium core starts to
shrink?
A.
B.
C.
D.
Hydrogen fuses in shell around core
Helium fusion slowly begins
Helium fusion rate rapidly rises
Core pressure sharply drops
Broken thermostat: rising fusion rate in shell does not expand
core, so luminosity continues to rise.
Thought Question
What happens in a low-mass star when core temperature rises
enough for helium fusion to begin?
A. Helium fusion slowly starts up
B. Hydrogen fusion stops
C. Helium fusion rises very sharply
Hint: Degeneracy pressure is the main form of pressure in
the inert helium core
Thought Question
What happens in a low-mass star when core temperature rises
enough for helium fusion to begin?
A. Helium fusion slowly starts up
B. Hydrogen fusion stops
C. Helium fusion rises very sharply
Hint: Degeneracy pressure is the main form of pressure in
the inert helium core
Helium Flash
• Thermostat is broken in low-mass red giant
because degeneracy pressure supports core
• Core temperature rises rapidly when helium fusion
begins
• Helium fusion rate skyrockets until thermal
pressure takes over and expands core again
Helium burning stars neither shrink nor grow
because thermostat is temporarily fixed.
Thought Question
What happens when the star’s core runs out of helium?
A.
B.
C.
D.
The star explodes
Carbon fusion begins
The core cools off
Helium fuses in a shell around the core
Thought Question
What happens when the star’s core runs out of helium?
A.
B.
C.
D.
The star explodes
Carbon fusion begins
The core cools off
Helium fuses in a shell around the core
Life stages
of a lowmass star
like the Sun
Star clusters
help us test
models of
stellar
evolution
because they
contain stars
of same age
but at
different life
stages
How does a low mass star die?
A star like our
sun dies by
puffing off its
outer layers,
creating a
planetary
nebula.
Only a white
dwarf is left
behind
A star like our
sun dies by
puffing off its
outer layers,
creating a
planetary
nebula.
Only a white
dwarf is left
behind
A star like our
sun dies by
puffing off its
outer layers,
creating a
planetary
nebula.
Only a white
dwarf is left
behind
A star like our
sun dies by
puffing off its
outer layers,
creating a
planetary
nebula.
Only a white
dwarf is left
behind
Thought Question
What happens to Earth’s orbit as Sun loses mass late
in its life?
A. Earth’s orbit gets bigger
B. Earth’s orbit gets smaller
C. Earth’s orbit stays the same
Thought Question
What happens to Earth’s orbit as Sun loses mass late
in its life?
A. Earth’s orbit gets bigger
B. Earth’s orbit gets smaller
C. Earth’s orbit stays the same
What have we learned?
• What are the life stages of a low-mass star?
• A low-mass star spends most of its life generating energy by
fusing hydrogen in its core. Then it becomes a red giant, with a
hydrogen shell burning around an inert helium core. Next comes
helium core burning, followed by doubleshell burning of hydrogen
and helium shells around an inert carbon core.
• c In the late
What have we learned?
• How does a low-mass
star die?
• A low-mass star like the
Sun never gets hot
enough to fuse carbon in
its core. It expels its
outer layers into space as
a planetary nebula,
leaving behind a white
dwarf.