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Star and Planet Formation Sommer term 2007 Henrik Beuther & Sebastian Wolf 16.4 Introduction (H.B. & S.W.) 23.4 Physical processes, heating and cooling … (H.B.) 30.4 Gravitational collapse & early protostellar evolution I (H.B.) 07.5 Gravitational collapse & early protostellar evolution II (H.B.) 14.5 Outflows and jets (H.B.) 21.5 Pre-main sequence evolution, stellar birthline (S.W.) 28.5 Pfingsten (no lecture) 04.6 Clusters, the initial mass function (IMF), massive star formation (H.B.) 11.6 Protoplanetary disks: Observations + Models I (S.W.) 18.6 Gas in disks, molecules, chemistry, keplerian motions (H.B.) 25.6 Protoplanetary disks: Observations + Models II (S.W.) 02.7 Accretion, transport processes, local structure and stability (S.W.) 09.7 Planet formation scenarios (S.W.) 16.7 Extrasolar planets: Searching for other worlds (S.W.) 23.7 Summary and open questions (H.B. & S.W.) More Information and the current lecture files: http://www.mpia.de/homes/beuther/lecture_ss07.html and http://www.mpia.de/homes/swolf/vorlesung/sommer2007.html Emails: [email protected], [email protected] M51: The Whirlpool Galaxy M51: The Whirlpool Galaxy QuickTime™ and a GIF decompressor are needed to see this picture. Andromeda CO(2-1) Optical Mid-Infared view of part of Galactic plane Giant Molecular Clouds Sizes: 20 to 100pc; Masses: 104 to 106 Msun; Temperatures: 10 to 15K Superesonic velocity dispersion ~2-3 km/s mainly due to turbulence Magnetic field strengths of the order 10mG Average local densities ~104cm-3; Volume-averaged densities ~102cm-3 --> highly clumped material Sites of Star Formation Masses: Between fractions and a few 100 solar masses Optical Near-Infrared Densities: Of the order 106cm-3 1.2 mm Dust Continuum C18O N2H+ Properties of Molecular Clouds Type n Size [cm-3] [pc] T [K] Mass [Msun] Giant Molecular Cloud 102 50 15 105 Dark Cloud Complex 5x102 10 10 104 Individual Dark Cloud 103 2 10 30 Dense low-mass cores 104 0.1 10 10 Dense high-mass cores >105 0.1-1 10-30 100-1000 Orion The Star-Forming Region W43 Optical Near-Infrared 1.2mm dust cont. Planck's Black Body Planck's Black Body Wien's Law max = 2.9/T [mm] Examples: The Sun Humans Molecular Clouds Cosmic Background T 6000 K max= 480 nm (optical) T 310 K max= 9.4 mm (MIR) T 20 K max= 145 mm (FIR/submm) T 2.7 K max= 1.1 mm (mm) Properties of Main Sequence Stars Mass [Msun] 60 40 20 10 4 2 1 0.8 0.2 Sp. Type O5 O6 O9 B2 B8 A5 G2 K0 M5 Lum [log(Lsun)] 5.90 5.62 4.99 3.76 2.26 1.15 0.04 -0.55 -2.05 Teff [log(K)] 4.65 4.61 4.52 4.34 4.08 3.91 3.77 3.66 3.52 tMS [yr] 3.4x106 4.3x106 8.1x106 2.6x107 1.6x108 1.1x109 1.0x1010 2.5x1010 >1011 tMS ~ 5x10-4 Mc2/L = 1x1010 (M[Msun])/(L[Lsun]) yr } greater than age of universe Number of Stellar Types in the Milky Way 80% 68% Number 60% The easiest to see in night sky and distant galaxies 40% Sun 20% 13% 0% 1% 0% 0% 1% O-M F-M O B A 3% 9% 7% 0% Supergiant Red Giant (I & II) (III) F Main Sequence (V) G K M B-F White Dwarf Star Formation Paradigm Gas giants Sizes not to scale Jupiter Saturn Uranus Mercury Terrestrial planets Venus Neptun Earth Mars since 1995: > 200 Extrasolar Planets discovered • “Hot Jupiters” • High masses • Highly elliptical orbits L.R.Cook Overview planet formation (S.W.) 1. Introduction: Stars – Disks – Planets 2. Protoplanetary Disks: Observations 3. Disk models 1. Accretion, Transport Processes 2. Local Structure and Stability 4. Planet Formation Scenarios 5. Extrasolar Planets The solar system: some striking facts Planetary orbits are coplanar Planets orbit the sun in the same direction Distribution of Mass and Angular Momentum: Sun Mass: 99.86% but Angular Momentum <2% Age estimation: Sun and Planets have been formed at the same time Extrasolar Planets: large masses, high excentricities, low orbits Immanuel Kant “Allgemeine Naturgeschichte und Theorie des Himmels” (1755) Solar System is evolving Planets are formed from rotating gas disks Star Formation – Planet Formation Protostellar / Young circumstellar / Protoplanetary Disk: - Gas / Dust disks around protostars - typical diameter: a few 100 AU Planet Formation: “Byproduct” of Star formation: Collapse of a rotating molecular cloud core (angular momentum <> 0) => Formation of a rotating distribution of the infalling material around the central object (Protostar / Pre-main-sequence Star) Circumstellar Disks - “Reservoir” for mass and angular momentum - Environment + Material for Planet Formation - Evolve in time (structure + composition) McCaughrean et al. 1996 IRAS 04302+2247 betaPic HK Tau Young Circumstellar Disks [ => Planet Formation ] => Debris Disks BD+31643 Star and Planet Formation Sommer term 2007 Henrik Beuther & Sebastian Wolf 16.4 Introduction (H.B. & S.W.) 23.4 Physical processes, heating and cooling … (H.B.) 30.4 Gravitational collapse & early protostellar evolution I (H.B.) 07.5 Gravitational collapse & early protostellar evolution II (H.B.) 14.5 Outflows and jets (H.B.) 21.5 Pre-main sequence evolution, stellar birthline (S.W.) 28.5 Pfingsten (no lecture) 04.6 Clusters, the initial mass function (IMF), massive star formation (H.B.) 11.6 Protoplanetary disks: Observations + models I (S.W.) 18.6 Gas in disks, molecules, chemistry, keplerian motions (H.B.) 25.6 Protoplanetary disks: Observations + models II (S.W.) 02.7 Accretion, transport processes, local structure and stability (S.W.) 09.7 Planet formation scenarios (S.W.) 16.7 Extrasolar planets: Searching for other worlds (S.W.) 23.7 Summary and open questions (H.B. & S.W.) More Information and the current lecture files: http://www.mpia.de/homes/beuther/lecture_ss07.html and http://www.mpia.de/homes/swolf/vorlesung/sommer2007.html Emails: [email protected], [email protected]