Download Document

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
STAR LIFE & DEATH
Life on the Main Sequence
Life on the Main Sequence
• Stable fusion: hydrogen  helium
• Accumulation of helium in core
 Steady increase in luminosity
• 90% of star’s life spent on main sequence
• More mass  shorter MS lifetime
Main Sequence structure depends on mass . . .
pgs. 276
Low-mass stars:
luminosity increases with age
zero-age
main sequence
Sun
Temperature
Change in composition of
1 solar mass star.
Fusion ceases when core
converted to helium –
star now leaves main
sequence.
Sun: ~ 10 billion years
Star Death I:
Low Mass Stars
(M < 8M)
‘Evolutionary tracks’
Surface
cools,
core
contracts
& heats,
radius
expands.
Red Giant
p. 277
Sun as a red giant
Vigorous
H  He fusion
in shell
drives
envelope
outward.
Inert helium core
(shrinking)
p. 277
Red Giant: Aldebaran
T = 3500 K
L = 370 L
R = 50 R
M3M
* Core temp  100 million K: Helium fusion begins
Another
Helium
Beryllium
Gamma Ray
Helium
Carbon
Gamma Ray
In addition . . .
12C
+
4He

16O
+ gamma ray
On the HR diagram . . .
He ignition
Core He
exhaustion
Horizontal
branch
Supergiant
Helium-burning,
Horizontal Branch
star
p. 279
Supergiant Star
Helium-fusing shell
Hydrogen-burning shell
Contracting
carbon-helium
core
* Supergiants lose mass:
> Stellar winds
> ‘Flashes’ in
helium-burning shell
Old stellar core
Planetary Nebula
Ejected stellar
envelope
Ring Nebula
p. 281
p. 281
Hourglass
Nebula
Old stellar core
shrinking to
White Dwarf
state.
The whole story . . .
p. 280
Star Death II:
High Mass Stars
(M > 8M)
High temp., rapid fusion
on CNO Cycle
Again . . . hydrogen
fusion ceases when core
converted to helium –
star now leaves main
sequence.
Multiple core fusion
stages are possible.
core re-ignition
core exhaustion
p. 283
For a 25 M star:
Core Fusion
Core Temp
Duration
H fusion
40 million K
7 million yr
He fusion
200 million K
500,000 yr
Carbon fusion
600 million K
600 yr
Neon fusion
1.2 billion K
1 yr
Oxygen fusion
1.5 billion K
6 mos
Silicon fusion
2.7 billion K
1 day
results in Iron
As fusion ceases . . .
‘Onion Skin’
p. 283
Fusion ceases when iron is produced . . .
p. 284
Iron core contracts, heats
Nuclei disintegrate
Protons absorb electrons:
proton + electron  neutron + neutrino
Core stiffens, bounces back slightly
Core bounce + neutrino flow ejects envelope:
SUPERNOVA!
Elements heavier
than iron created
in blast.
Supernova
1987A
Before
After
SN 1987A in 1999
SN ejecta
Stuff ejected
before SN.
SN blast wave
reaches inner
ring
SN 1987A
proton + electron  neutron + neutrino
(deep underground)
Neutrino arrival
SN probably
occur
~ once per
100 yrs
in our galaxy.
600 mi/s
Crab Nebula
Supernova
Remnant
(Exploded 1054 AD)
Pulsar
(rotating neutron
star)
Visible in broad daylight for 23 days in July, 1054!
".. In the 1st year of the period
Chih-ho, the 5th moon, the day
chi-ch'ou, a guest star
appeared south-east of TienKuan [Zeta Tauri]. After more
than a year, it gradually
became invisible .."
Supernova recorded at Chaco Canyon, NM?
Cygnus
Loop
~13,000 BC
Vela Supernova Remnant
(~10,000 BC)
Interstellar medium ‘seeded’
with heavy elements.
Cassiopeia A Supernova Remnant
Neutron star?
Black hole?
X-ray
Iron
Cassiopeia A
Supernova
Remnant
Silicon
Related documents