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A short course in Stellar Evolution Dr. Maura McLaughlin West Virginia University [email protected] July 8 2008 Pulsar Search Collaboratory Outline • What is a star? (5 minutes) • Stellar properties (20 minutes) • The HR diagram (20 minutes) • The life cycle of a star (20 minutes) • Supernovae (10 minutes) • Compact objects (20 minutes) The Amazing Power of Starlight By analyzing the light received from a star, what can we learn? 1. Brightness 2. Distance 3. Temperature 4. Composition 5. Size 6. Masses Brightness Apparent magnitude scale m1 - m2 = -2.5log10(I1/I2) Magn. Diff. Intensity Ratio 1 2.5 2 2.5*2.5 = 6.25 … … 5 (2.5)5 = 100 Betelgeuse Magnitude = 0.41 mag Rigel Magnitude = 0.14 mag For a magnitude difference of 0.41 – 0.14 = 0.27, we find an intensity ratio of (2.5)0.27 = 1.28 Distance 1 parsec (3.23 light years) is an angle of 1 arcsecond Distance in parsecs = 1 / (Angle in arcseconds) Betelgeuse Magnitude = 0.45 mag Absolute magnitude an object would have at 10 pc M = m - 5(log10D - 1) Rigel Magnitude = 0.18 mag Distance Back to our example of Betelgeuse and Rigel: Betelgeuse Rigel mV 0.41 0.14 MV -5.5 -6.8 d 152 pc 244 pc Difference in absolute magnitudes: 6.8 – 5.5 = 1.3 => Luminosity ratio = (2.512)1.3 = 3.3 Betelgeuse Rigel Question An astronomer measures a stellar parallax to be 0.25 milli-arcseconds. The distance to the star is therefore… (a) 4 parsecs (b) 4 kilo-parsecs (c) 4 Mega-parsecs (d) 4 Giga-parsecs Luminosities Luminosity is the amount of energy a body radiates per unit time. For two objects of Betelgeuse the same apparent brightness, Magnitude = 0.45 mag Inverse square law 2 Rigel L1/L2=(D D ) 1/ 2 Magnitude = 0.18 mag Question The Sun has an apparent magnitude of -26.7 as measured from Earth. What would the apparent magnitude be as measured from Saturn (10 AU) (a) -26.7 (b) -31.7 (c) -21.7 (d) -16.7 Temperatures The light from a star is usually concentrated in a rather narrow range of wavelengths. The spectrum of a star’s light is approximately a thermal spectrum called a blackbody spectrum. A perfect blackbody emitter would not reflect any radiation. Thus the name ‘blackbody’. Betelgeuse Magnitude = 0.45 mag Rigel Magnitude = 0.18 mag Temperatures 1. The hotter an object is, the more luminous it is. Intensity is proportional to T4. Betelgeuse Magnitude = 0.45 mag 2. The peak of the black body spectrum shifts Rigel towards shorter wavelengths when the temperature Magnitude = 0.18 mag increases. Wien’s displacement law: lmax ≈ 3,000,000 nm / TK (where TK is the temperature in Kelvin). Temperatures The color of a star is measured by comparing its brightness in two different wavelength bands. The bluer a star appears, the smaller the color index B – V. The hotter a star is, the smaller its color index B – V. B band V band Question Orion Betelgeuse Which star has a smaller color index?? Rigel Compositions Spectral lines are the absorption of photons at discrete energy levels. Temperatures too high produce higher energy photons which ionize all hydrogen. Temperatures too low do not produce enough excitation into higher energy states. Compositions Spectral Classes Spectral Classes Sun is a G2 star!! Mnemonics to remember the spectral sequence: Oh Oh Only Be Boy, Bad A An Astronomers Fine F Forget Girl/Guy Grade Generally Kiss Kills Known Me Me Mnemonics Sizes We already know that hotter stars are brighter. But brightness also increases with size! A B Quantitatively: Star B will be brighter than star A, even if they have the same temperature. L = 4 p R2 s T4 Surface area of the star Surface flux due to a blackbody spectrum Question Polaris has just about the same spectral type (and thus surface temperature) as our sun, but it is 10,000 times brighter than our sun. How much larger is it than our Sun? Masses Recall Kepler’s 3rd Law: Py2 = aAU3 Valid for the solar system: star with 1 solar mass in the center. We find almost the same law for binary stars with masses MA and MB different from 1 solar mass: 3 a ____ AU M A + MB = Py2 (MA and MB in units of solar masses) Examples: a) Binary system with period of P = 32 years and separation of a = 16 AU: 3 16 ____ MA + M B = = 4 solar masses. 2 32 b) Any binary system with a combination of period P and separation a that obeys Kepler’s 3rd Law must have a total mass of 1 solar mass. c) Since we also know MA/MB = rA/rB, we can solve for masses. What can we learn about the Sun? • Average star • Spectral type G2 • Only appears so bright because it is so close. • Absolute visual magnitude = 4.83 (magnitude if it were at a distance of 32.6 light years) • 109 times Earth’s diameter • 333,000 times Earth’s mass • Consists entirely of gas (av. density = 1.4 g/cm3) • Central temperature = 15 million K • Surface temperature = 5800 K Organizing the Family of Stars: The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram Example: useful way to understand populations Organizing the Family of Stars: The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram We know: Stars have different temperatures, different luminosities, and different sizes. To bring some order into that zoo of different types of stars: organize them in a diagram of Absolute mag. or Luminosity Luminosity versus Temperature (or spectral type) Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram Spectral type: O Temperature B A F G K M The Hertzsprung Russell Diagram Most stars are found along the main sequence The Hertzsprung Russell Diagram Same temperature, but much brighter than MS stars Must be much larger Same temp., but fainter → Dwarfs Giant Stars Radii of Stars in the HR Diagram 100 times smaller than the Sun Masses of Stars in the HertzsprungRussell Diagram The higher a star’s mass, the more luminous (brighter) it is: L ~ M3.5 High-mass stars have much shorter lives than low-mass stars: tlife ~ M-2.5 Sun: ~ 10 billion yr. 10 Msun: ~ 30 million yr. 0.1 Msun: ~ 3 trillion yr. A Census of the Stars Faint, red dwarfs (low mass) are the most common stars. Bright, hot, blue main-sequence stars (high-mass) are very rare. Giants and supergiants are extremely rare. Life Cycle of a Star ? The Contraction of a Protostar Evidence of Star Formation Nebula around S Monocerotis (Foxfur) Contains many massive, very young stars, including T Tauri stars: strongly variable; bright in the infrared. Energy generation in the Sun: Nuclear Fusion Basic reaction: 4 1H 4He + energy 4 protons have more mass than 4He. Energy gain = Dm*c2 What reaction rate does Sun need to resist its own gravity? Need large proton speed to overcome Coulomb barrier (electromagnetic repulsion between protons). T ≥ 107 K = 10 million K Hydrostatic Equilibrium Outward pressure force must exactly balance the weight of all layers above everywhere in the star. This condition uniquely determines the interior structure of the star. This is why we find stable stars on such a narrow strip (main sequence) in the HR diagram. Question Why are high temperatures needed for nuclear fusion? a) electrons must be moving quickly to change orbitals b) the high temperature is necessary to fully cook the new atom c) protons need high speeds to overcome repulsive force d) protons need high speeds to overcome gravity Masses of Main-Sequence Stars Stars with masses greater than 100 solar masses are unstable. Stars with masses less than 0.08 solar masses cannot fuse hydrogen in their cores - brown dwarfs. The Life of Main-Sequence Stars Stars gradually exhaust their hydrogen fuel. In this process of aging, they are gradually becoming brighter, evolving off the zero-age main sequence. Death line The Lifetimes of Stars on the Main Sequence Expansion onto the Giant Branch Once Hydrogen in the core is completely converted into He, H burning continues in shell. Lots of energy produced -> star expands to form Red Giant. Giants and supergiants are 101000 times larger than the Sun and 10 - 106 times less dense. Expansion cools the star and makes it more luminous. Sun will expand beyond Earth’s orbit! Question After Hydrogen burning in the core of the Sun ends, its SURFACE temperature will ________ and its size will __________. (A) increase; decrease (B) decrease; increase (C) increase; increase (D) decrease; decrease Red Giant Evolution H-burning shell keeps dumping He onto the core. He core gets denser and hotter until the next stage of nuclear burning can begin in the core: He fusion through the “triple-alpha process”: 4He + 4He 8Be + g + 4He 12C + g The onset of this process is termed the 8Be helium flash Hyades Star Cluster Open cluster in constellation Taurus. About 100 stars. HR Diagram of Hyades High-mass stars evolved onto the giant branch Turn-off point Low-mass stars still on the main sequence Estimating the Age of a Cluster The lower on the MS the turn-off point, the older the cluster. Endpoints of stellar evolution… Depends almost completely on its mass. Let’s start with the least massive stars and go to the most! Red Dwarfs (0.08 - 0.4 solar masses) Stars with less than ~ 0.4 solar masses are completely convective. Hydrogen and helium remain well mixed throughout the entire star. No phase of shell “burning” with expansion to giant. Star not hot enough to ignite He burning. Could live for 100 billion yrs or more! Universe only 14 billion years old so can’t test this though… Sunlike Stars Sunlike stars (~ 0.4 – 8 solar masses) develop a helium core. Expansion to red giant during H burning shell phase Ignition of He burning in the He core Formation of a degenerate C,O core The Fate of our Sun and the End of Earth • Sun will expand to a red giant in ~ 5 billion years • Expands to ~ Earth’s orbit • Earth will then be incinerated! • Sun may form a planetary nebula (but uncertain) • Sun’s C,O core will become a white dwarf Low luminosity; high temperature => White dwarfs are found in the lower center/left of the H-R diagram. White Dwarfs Degenerate stellar remnant (C,O and degenerate electrons) Matter in the He core has no energy source left. Not enough thermal pressure to resist and balance gravity Pressure in degenerate core is due to the fact that electrons can not be packed arbitrarily close together and have small energies. White Dwarfs Extremely dense: 1 teaspoon of white dwarf material: mass ≈ 16 tons!!! Chunk of white dwarf material the size of a beach ball would outweigh an ocean liner! white dwarfs: Mass ~ Msun Temp. ~ 25,000 K Luminosity ~ 0.01 Lsun The Chandrasekhar Limit The more massive a white dwarf, the smaller it is. Pressure becomes larger, until electron degeneracy pressure can no longer hold up against gravity. WDs with more than ~ 1.4 solar masses can not exist! The Deaths of Massive Stars: Final stages of fusion in high-mass stars (> 8 Msun), leading to the formation of an iron core, happen very rapidly: Si burning lasts only for ~ 1 day. The Deaths of Massive Stars: Iron core ultimately collapses, triggering an explosion that destroys the star: Supernova The Famous Supernova of 1987: Supernova 1987A Before At maximum Unusual supernova in the Large Magellanic Cloud in Feb. 1987 Where do we get elements heavier than Iron??? Only in Supernovae!!! The huge heat generated in the explosion makes elements like Gold, Silver and Platinum. Cas A Supernova Remnant Only 300 years old -> youngest known remnant in MW! Cas A Supernova Remnant What is that?! Only 300 years old -> youngest known remnant in MW! Neutron Stars A supernova The central core will Pressure becomes so high collapse into a explosion of that electrons and compact object an M > 8 Msun protons combine to form supported by star blows stable neutrons away its outer neutron degeneracy throughout the object. pressure. layers. Typical size: R ~ 10 km Mass: M ~ 1.4 – 3 Msun Density: r ~ 1014 g/cm3 Piece of neutron star matter of the size of a sugar cube has a mass of ~ 100 million tons!!! Black Holes Just like white dwarfs (Chandrasekhar limit: 1.4 Msun), there is a mass limit for neutron stars: Neutron stars can not exist with masses > 3 Msun We know of no mechanism to halt the collapse of a compact object with > 3 Msun. It will collapse a singularity: => A black hole! Escape Velocity Velocity needed to escape Earth’s gravity from the surface: vesc vesx ≈ 11.6 km/s. Now, gravitational force decreases with distance (~ 1/d2) => Starting out high above the surface => lower escape velocity. If you could compress Earth to a smaller radius => higher escape velocity from the surface. vesc vesc The Schwarzschild Radius => There is a limiting radius where the escape velocity reaches the speed of light, c: ___ Rs = 2GM c2 Vesc = c G = gravitational constant M = mass Rs is called the Schwarzschild radius. Schwarzschild Radius and Event Horizon No object can travel faster than the speed of light. => Nothing (not even light) can escape from inside the Schwarzschild radius. We have no way of finding out what’s happening inside the Schwarzschild radius. “Event horizon” What is the Schwarzchild radius of a typical human being? Question What would happen to the Earth’s orbit if the Sun were replaced by a 1 solar mass black hole? A) Nothing at all. B) We would slowly (on a timespan of years) get sucked into the black hole. C) We would immediately (on a timespan of seconds) get sucked into the black hole. D) Our orbit would become larger because of the smaller object at the center. Observing Black Holes No light can escape a black hole => Black holes can not be observed directly. If an invisible compact object is part of a binary, we can estimate its mass from the orbital period and radial velocity. Mass > 3 Msun => Black hole! Compact object with > 3 Msun must be a black hole! Review - Compact Objects Sunlike stars (masses 0.4 - 8 solar masses) - become white dwarfs (R ~ 10,000 km) - maximum mass limit of 1.4 solar masses - supported by electron degeneracy pressure - teaspoon of WD material would weigh as much as 100 elephants More massive stars (roughly 8-10 solar masses) - become neutron stars (R ~ 10 km) - maximum mass limit of 2-3 solar masses - supported by neutron degeneracy pressure - teaspoon of NS star material would weigh as much as a supertanker Most massive stars (roughly > 10 solar masses) - become black holes (Rs ~ 10 km) - no maximum mass limit - too massive to be supported by degeneracy pressure