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Stellar Evolution Where do gold earrings come from? 9 Goals • Explain why stars evolve off the main sequence. • What happens when they leave the main sequence? • How does mass affect what happens? • How do stars die? 9 9 9 The Main Sequence • Stars characterized by what holds them up. • 90% held up by heat of Hydrogen fusion 4H He + Energy 9 M.S. Lifetime • More Massive Hotter • Hotter More luminous • More luminous shorter life TLife Mass ( M Sun ) TSun L( LSun ) 9 M13 M13 – Natalie Redfield ‘06 9 Age of M13 12 billion years old 9 The Main Sequence • A star is a delicate balance between the force of gravity pulling in, and pressure pushing out. • Stars on the main sequence fuse hydrogen in their core to produce thermal pressure. • Longest phase of a star’s life. 9 What then? • When the hydrogen in the core is almost consumed the balance between gravity thermal pressure pushing out and gravity pushing in is disturbed. • The structure and appearance of the star changes dramatically. • What happens then, depends on the star’s mass. • Two cases: – Low-mass (< 8 x mass of Sun) – High-mass (> 8 x mass of Sun) 9 Helium Ash • Heavier elements, sink to the “bottom.” • After 10 billion years, core is “choked” with helium “ash”. • H He continues in shell around non-burning core. 9 The Red Giant Branch • Without fusion pressure in core: – Helium core collapses (no counter to gravity) – Density in core increases. • 3He C + Energy in core • 4H He + Energy in shell • Extra energy results in extra pressure. Star expands. • The star gets bigger while its outside gets cooler. 9 The Onion Sun • Red Giant Stars • Layers of: – – – – Non-fusing H Fusing H Fusing He Non-fusing C “ash” 9 …And the Solar System? • A few million years from now: – Sun becomes slightly brighter – Ocean’s begin to evaporate – “Hot House” Earth • A few billion years from now: – – – – Sun swells up Engulfs the inner Solar System Certain death for terrestrial planets Possible “spring” on the Jovian ocean-moons! 9 Red Supergiant • What happens when the Sun runs out of helium in its core? • Same as before. • Core shrinks, surface expands. • Radius ~ 3 AU! 9 Death • Core is contracting and heating. – Surface is cooling and expanding. • Will it finally become hot enough in core for Carbon to fuse? • For the Sun: No. • Gravity keeps contracting the core: 1000 kg/cm3! • What stops it? • Electron degeneracy pressure! 9 Electron Degeneracy Pressure from motion of atoms 9 Electron Degeneracy Pressure from electron shells 9 NGC3242 – HST – Bruce Balick 9 M57 – Ring Nebula 9 M27 – Dumbbell Nebula – copyright VLT, ESO 9 Cat’s Eye 9 Eskimo Nebula 9 Hourglass Nebula 9 White Dwarf • Mass of Sun • Radius of Earth • Hot as Sun’s core • A million times denser than lead • Slowly cool off NGC2440 – HST – Bruce Balick 9 9 High-Mass Stars • Think back to the first carbon core. • How they get from main sequence to the carbon core stage is a little different. • Now however, there is enough mass that it becomes hot enough to fuse carbon? • Hot enough to eventually fuse lots of elements. 9 The Iron Core 4H He + Energy 3He C + Energy C + He O + Energy The ash of one reaction, becomes the fuel of the next. • Fusion takes place in the core as long as the end result also yields energy. • This energy causes pressure which counters gravity. • But Iron doesn’t fuse. • • • • 9 Core-Collapse • • • • • • Iron core – no outward pressure. Gravity wins! Star collapses rapidly! Electron degeneracy can’t stop it. Atomic structure can’t stop it. Electrons and protons crushed together to produce neutrons. • Neutrons pushed together by force of gravity. 9 Supernova 9 Supernova 9 Supernova 9 Supernova 9 Supernova • The result of the catastrophic collapse is the rebound and explosion of the core. • From start of collapse to now: 1 second! • Matter thrown back into the interstellar medium. • Matter rushing outwards, fuses with matter rushing inwards. • Every element after Fe is made in the instant of a supernova! 9 M1 – Crab Nebula – copyright VLT 9 Veil Nebula – Lua Gregory (English ’05) 9 NGC 4526 – 6 Million parsecs away 9 Neutron Stars • A giant ball of neutrons. • Mass : at least 1.4 x mass of the Sun. • Diameter: 20 km! • Density: 1018 kg/m3 – A thimble weighs as much as a mountain • Day: 1 – 0.001 seconds! • Magnetic fields as strong as the Sun, but in the space of a city. 9 Pulsars • Interstellar Lighthouses. • See periodic bursts of radiation. • Perfect clocks. • While every pulsar is a neutron star, the opposite isn’t true. 9 Crab Nebula Pulsar 9 Neutron Degeneracy • Neutron stars are held up by neutron degeneracy pressure. – Recall electron degeneracy pressure for white dwarfs. – For white dwarfs, maximum mass of 1.4 Msun • For neutron stars, maximum mass ~3Msun • What happens if a high-mass star is SO big that its central core is bigger than this? • What happens when gravity is stronger than even neutron degeneracy pressure? 9 Density • Density = mass per volume • From Red Giant cores to White Dwarfs to Neutron Stars, density has been increasing. • As density increases, the force of gravity on the surface increases. • The greater the force, the higher the escape velocity: – How fast you need to go in order to escape the surface. • How dense can something get? • How strong can the force of gravity be? • What if the escape velocity is faster than light? 9 Singularity • When a high-mass star’s core is greater than ~3 x Msun, then, when it collapses, neutron degeneracy pressure can’t balance gravity. • The star collapses to form a singularity. • No size at all. • Density infinite. • Escape velocity > c 9 Black Hole Diagram Singularity Event Horizon . Schwarzschild Radius 9 Seeing Holes • Can’t see black hole itself, but can see matter falling into a hole. • Gravitational forces stretch and rip matter: heats up. • Very hot objects emit in X-rays (interior of Sun) • Cygnus X-1. http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~spac250/steve/ident.html 9 Binaries • Gravitational tides pull matter off big low density objects towards small high density objects. Cygnus X-1 9