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ASTR2050 Spring 2005 Lecture 10am 8 March 2005 Please turn in your homework now! In this class we will study “compact objects”: • Degeneracy pressure • White dwarfs: End state of “low mass” stars • Neutron stars: End state of “high mass” stars • Pulsars: Rotating neutron stars • Next class: Black holes (“very high mass” stars) 1 Reminder: Evolution of a “few solar mass” star White dwarf So what’s so special about a “white dwarf ” star? 2 Review(?): The “Equation of State” Consider N particles in a box of side L A particle hits a wall giving a force: !p p pv F= = = !t L/v L L Therefore there is a pressure P on the wall from all N particles that hit it, i.e. F N pv P=N = 3 = npv = nmv2 Area L where n is the number density of (nonrelativistic) particles each with a mass m. 3 Simple example:The Ideal Gas Law Recall: We used this to model main sequence stars Particles move freely and independently. Temperature is defined by the (average) kinetic energy of the collection of particles: 1 2 1 mv = kT 2 2 This gives the “ideal gas equation of state”: P = nkT also known as (We will use this form.) 4 PV = NkT Degeneracy Pressure A white dwarf is a very compact object.This leads to new effects. For example, temperature is irrelevant for the equation of state! ... For electrons packed closely together, the Pauli Exclusion Principle forces them to fill up the available quantum states: E5 E4 E3 E E2 E1 kT E0 See Kutner Fig.10.11 The average energy of the electrons is determined by quantum mechanics, and is much greater than kT. A “degeneracy pressure” is created which holds off gravitational collapse. 5 How can we calculate degeneracy pressure? Use the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle! h !p!x ≥ ≡ h̄ 2" Average momentum is zero, so put p=Δp Put Δx = space for one electron = (1/ne)1/3 5/3 2 ne ⇒ p= 1/3 h̄ne p Therefore P = ne pv = ne p = h̄ me me We’ve made some crude approximations when dealing with the quantum mechanics. A careful calculation gives about x2 larger. 6 Express the result in terms of “matter”, instead of “electrons” For atomic density nZ have ne=ZnZ But mass density ρ = AmpnZ + mene ≈ AmpnZ (since electrons are light) Therefore ne=(Z/A)(ρ/mp) and ! "5/3 5/3 (!/m ) p Z p 2 P = ne pv = ne p = 2h̄ me A me Included x2 “correction” factor. See Kutner Eq.10.11. 7 White Dwarf Stars Remember: We know a lot about white dwarfs because they’ve been seen as binaries! (Recall 8 Feb 11am lecture.) Example: Typical values are M=M! −2 R=10 R! which give a density a million times greater than the Sun, or a million times that of water. 8 What controls? Degeneracy pressure or thermal pressure? (Kutner Example 10.3.) 6 Assumptions: 3 !=10 gm/cm Z/A=1/2 6 T =10 × 10 K You find that the degeneracy pressure (from our formula) is about 100 times larger than the thermal pressure (from the Ideal Gas Law). That is, a white dwarf behaves as if it were a degenerate electron gas! 9 White Dwarf in Hydrostatic Equilibrium M2 Recall (15 Feb) the central pressure of a star: PC = G R4 Use degenerate electron gas equation of state to find 2 ! M M 5/3 G 4 !" ! R R3 "5/3 or 1 R ! 1/3 M (See Kutner for details and proportionality constants.) That is, add mass to a white dwarf and it shrinks! Of course, it also gets more dense, too! 10 The Chandrasekhar Limit This can’t go on forever. What gives? We have ignored relativity, and have written v=p/m . Consider instead the limiting equation of state with v=c : ! "4/3 ! "4/3 Z ! P = ne pv = ne pc = 0.8h̄c A mp ! "4/3 2 M M Now, hydrostatic equilibrium gives G ! 4 R R3 The radius drops out! Find M = 1.44M! Largest possible mass for a white dwarf. After this... 11 Neutron Stars 12 Recall the pre-supernova phase of a high mass star: Red supergiant star − e + p → n + !e Core collapses, energy released, and A burst of neutrinos, and a neutron star is born! 13 Neutron Stars in Hydrostatic Equilibrium Treat the same way as white dwarfs but with me→mn (See Homework.) However you find that the density of a neutron star with Chandrasekhar mass is about the same density as a neutron! Complicated internal structure! How much more dense can it be? Neutron stars for undergraduates, R. Silbar and S. Reddy, Am.J.Phys. 72(2004)892 14 See also Kutner Figure 11.7 Pulsars: Rotating Neutron Stars Imagine the Sun collapsing to the size of Manhattan: Angular momentum: Iω same before and after 2 2 9 2 I = MR so INS/I! = (RNS/R!) = 2 × 10 5 !! = 30 days, so Neutron star period = 1.3ms Magnetic field: Expect (?) flux BR2 also conserved So, also expect 2 billion times the Sun’s magnetic field. Big!! 15 Kutner Fig. 11.10 Model of a Pulsar The Crab Pulsar in X-Ray (Chandra) and Optical (Hubble) 16 Pulsar Signals 17 The Crab Pulsar (HST) 18