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The Life of a Star Cathcart science “Which motion of earth causes which apparent motion of stars?” • Rotation= the earth is spinning • Revolution=the earth orbits the sun • Stars appear to circle Polaris during the night. • Different constellations are visible different months of the year. A star begins…. • …as a ball of gas and dust. • Gravity pulls the gas and dust together into a sphere. • The sphere becomes dense and hot. • Nuclear fusion changes hydrogen to helium. Main-sequence stars…. • ….are in the second and longest stage. • As long as they have hydrogen atoms to fuse into helium atoms they just keep on releasing lots of energy. Red giants…. • ….are what stars can become after the main-sequence stage. • This is a star that expands and cools because it has used up all of its hydrogen. • The center of the star shrinks, but the atmosphere gets very large. • The star may become a supergiant (100 times bigger than the sun). White dwarfs…. • …..are stars in their final stages. • This is a small hot star that is the leftover center of a star. • A white dwarf can no longer generate energy, but it can keep shining for billions of years Really massive stars…. • …might not make it to the white dwarf stage. • Massive stars might explode in a bright flash called a supernova. • A supernova can be brighter than a whole galaxy. A neutron star… • …forms from the center of a massive star that has exploded into a supernova. • A neutron star has collapsed under gravity to the point that all of its particles have become neutrons. A pulsar…. • ….is a neutron star that is spinning. If….. • …..the center of the collapsed star is massive enough • ….and it collapses further because of the strength of its own gravity • ….it could become a black hole. A black hole….. • ….is a place in space where the gravity is so strong nothing can escape • not even light. You have a choice… • You may write a story about the life of a star. • Or • You may create a comic strip about the life of a star. • Either way, you will be graded as follows: Your star must… • Begin as a ball of gas and dust. • Go from there to mainsequence, red-giant or supergiant, then to white dwarf. • Or be a massive star that goes from main-sequence to supernova to neutron star (perhaps pulsar) and perhaps becomes a black hole. For a perfect grade.. • The stages need to be named. • The stages need to be in order. • The story or comic strip needs to show an understanding of each stage. • EXTRA POINTS FOR ENTERTAINING THE TEACHER!