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The Sun and the Life of Stars Orion Nebula NEBULA: A large ball of dust and gas. All the mass in the nebula will be pulled in toward the centre. The density of the forming star (called a protostar) will increase. • Since these nebula are massive (~1030 kg), the gravitational force has a strong pull towards its centre on all its matter. • This results in immense pressure in the core. • The high pressure results in high temperature (16 million oC), which allows nuclear fusion to occur. Nuclear Fusion • Fusion results when two nuclei collide at very high speeds to “fuse” into a new nuclei. • The speeds have to be sufficient to overcome the strong electrical repulsion from the positive nuclei. (This is why the temperature must be high.) Nuclear Fusion • The simplest fusion is between H nuclei. • Essentially, the H nuclei fuse together (in stages), to create a helium nuclei • Along with He, energy in the form of light is produced (along with invisible particles called neutrinos). Nuclear Fusion • The light produced is very high energy rays. If this light made it to Earth, we would be “fried”. • So what happens? • The light goes through a series of collisions with atoms in the radiative zone, which we call a random walk. • During each collision the light loses energy, eventually becoming UV and visible light. Nuclear Fusion • Similar processes can occur to create larger nuclei, but this would require… • …higher temperatures, which means… • …higher pressure in the core, which means… • …more mass is needed, which means… • …a larger star! • But… this can happen to our star too! Nuclear Fusion • During the productive phase of its existence, the gravity pushing towards the centre of a star is balanced with the outward pressure from fusion. • Once the fusion stops, (H runs out) gravity will force the sun to collapse, which will increase the temperature so He can fuse (to form carbon). • When it does this, the outer layers “explode” and it becomes a Red Giant star. • The outer layers of the red giant, are now too far away to be held tightly by the star’s gravity, so they drift away. • What is left collapses inward to become a small, hot dense white dwarf • This will eventually cool and fade. Questions • 1) How do you think this process would be different for a) larger stars? b) smaller stars? • 2) Our sun will be “productive” for about 10 billion years. How do you think this compares to a) larger stars? b) smaller stars? Answers: • Smaller stars have a smaller gravitational force, therefore… – Less acceleration, so it takes longer to form – Less pressure, so the internal temperature is less, so fusion proceeds less rapidly, so the star lasts longer (even though it has less “fuel to burn” • Other than that, the process remains the same. Larger Stars… -If a star has more than 8 solar masses (rare), it becomes a red supergiant instead of a red giant. -When the core collapses inward, the outer layers explode outward in what is called a supernova APOD: January 24, 1997 - Supernova 1987a Fireball Resolved -The core continues to collapse, becoming a very dense neutron star -If the star is more than 30 solar masses (very rare), when it collapses it becomes a black hole which is so dense nothing can escape its gravity once it gets too close.