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Star Formation (Compare: Solar System Formation) Where Stars come from: the Interstellar Medium • Gas – Single atoms and molecules – Mostly hydrogen (90%), 9% helium; deficient in heavier elements • Dust – Microscopic clumps of atoms/molecules – Size ~ 107 m, similar to the wavelength of visible light – Composition is not well known • Temperature depends on the proximity of stars, typically ~100 K • Density is very low! – Gas: about 1 atom/cm3 D; Dust: even less dense How do we know it’s there? • Cold gas or dust doesn’t glow – they are dark – We might “see” them blocking light of other objects (Dark Nebulae) • Gas & Dust clouds are very dilute – they might not be blocking other object’s light totally – Usually they will reduce (redden) the light of other objects Reminder: Kirchhoff’s Laws Cool gas absorbs light at specific frequencies Dark Lines: “fingerprints of the elements” Looking Through Dust Clouds Emission Nebulae Example: Orion Nebula (M 42) • hot glowing gas Temperatures ~ 8000K • Made to glow by ultraviolet radiation emitted by young O- or B-type (hot) stars located inside • Color predominantly red, the color of a particular hydrogen emission line (“H”) Dark Nebulae Keyhole Nebula Dustlanes Nebula The Fundamental Problem in studying the stellar lifecycle • We study the subjects of our research for a tiny fraction of its lifetime • Sun’s life expectancy ~ 10 billion (1010) years • Careful study of the Sun ~ 370 years • We have studied the Sun for only 1/27 millionth of its lifetime! Suppose we study human beings… • Human life expectancy ~ 75 years • 1/27 millionth of this is about 74 seconds • What can we learn about people when allowed to observe them for no more than 74 seconds? Theory and Experiment • Theory: – Need a theory for star formation – Need a theory to understand the energy production in stars make prediction how bight stars are when and for how long in their lifetimes • Experiment: observe how many stars are where when and for how long in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram • Compare prediction and observation Star Formation & Lifecycle • Contraction of a cold interstellar cloud • Cloud contracts/warms, begins radiating; almost all radiated energy escapes • Cloud becomes dense opaque to radiation radiated energy trapped core heats up Example: Orion Nebula • Orion Nebula is a place where stars are being born Path in the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram Gas cloud becomes smaller, flatter, denser, hotter Star A Newborn Star • Main-sequence star; pressure from nuclear fusion and gravity are in balance – Duration ~ 10 billion years (much longer than all other stages combined) – Temperature ~ 15 million K at core, 6000 K at surface – Size ~ Sun Mass Matters • Larger masses – higher surface temperatures – higher luminosities – take less time to form – have shorter main sequence lifetimes • Smaller masses – lower surface temperatures – lower luminosities – take longer to form – have longer main sequence lifetimes Mass and the Main Sequence • The position of a star in the main sequence is determined by its mass All we need to know to predict luminosity and temperature! • Both radius and luminosity increase with mass Homework • Cosmic distance ladder III: Use formulae and descriptions given in question text of question