1 / 38

Stellar Evolution

Stellar Evolution. Homework Problems Chapter 13 Review Questions: 1-3, 9-11 Review Problems: 1, 2, 7 Web Inquiries: 1, 4 Homework Problems Chapter 14 Review Questions: 2, 4, 7, 9-11, 13 Review Problems: 3, 6, 9 Web Inquiries: 1. Main Sequence Life Time. Out of Fuel.

Download Presentation

Stellar Evolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Stellar Evolution • Homework Problems Chapter 13 • Review Questions: 1-3, 9-11 • Review Problems: 1, 2, 7 • Web Inquiries: 1, 4 • Homework Problems Chapter 14 • Review Questions: 2, 4, 7, 9-11, 13 • Review Problems: 3, 6, 9 • Web Inquiries: 1

  2. Main Sequence Life Time

  3. Out of Fuel After approximately 10 billion years of steady core hydrogen burning, a Sun-like (1 solar mass) star begins to run out of fuel. The situation is a little like that of an automobile cruising effortlessly along a highway at a constant speed of 55 mph for many hours, only to have the engine suddenly cough and sputter as the gas gauge reaches empty.

  4. Contraction • What happens when all of the Hydrogen in the core is used up and converted into Helium? • Source of energy is gone, gravity wins. • Contraction resumes. • Contraction leads to increase in density and temperature in the core.

  5. H-He shell burning Hydrogen fusion begins in a shell outside the original core as the temperature increases.

  6. H-shell Source

  7. Core Slice

  8. Stellar Evolution Larger Radii

  9. Main Sequence Turn-off

  10. Main Sequence Turn-off Larger Radii

  11. Giant Stars • Evolved Stars

  12. Core Helium Burning The helium flash terminates the giant star's ascent on the red-giant branch of the H-R diagram. Yet despite the explosive detonation of helium in the core, the flash does not increase the star's luminosity. On the contrary, the helium flash produces a rearrangement of the core that ultimately results in a reduction in the energy output. On the H-R diagram, the star enters a stable state with steady helium burning in the core and hydrogen burning in a shell. This adjustment in the star's properties occurs quite quickly, over about 100,000 years.

  13. Helium Flash

  14. Helium Flash and triple alpha 24He + 24He 48Be + g 48Be + 24He 612C + g

  15. Carbon Core Buildup The nuclear reactions in our star's helium core burn on, but not for long. Whatever helium exists in the core is rapidly consumed. The triple-alpha helium-to-carbon fusion reaction, like the proton-proton and CNO-cycle hydrogen-to-helium reactions before it, proceeds at a rate that increases very rapidly with temperature. At the extremely high temperatures found at this stage, the helium fuel doesn't last long, no more than a few tens of millions of years after the initial flash. Higher temperatures yield higher reaction rates.

  16. Helium Fusion Track • Post Helium Flash

  17. H-He, He-C shell burning Once the star runs out of helium in the core, contraction begins again. Eventually the core temperature allows helium fusion to occur.

  18. 1 Msun Evolutionary Track

  19. The End As our red supergiant ascends the asymptotic giant branch, its envelope swells while its core, too cool for further nuclear burning, continues to contract. If the central temperature could become high enough for carbon fusion to occur, still heavier products could be synthesized, and the newly generated energy might again support the star, restoring for a time the equilibrium between gravity and radiation. For 1 solar-mass stars, however, this does not occur. The temperature never reaches the 600 million K needed for a new round of nuclear reactions to occur. The red supergiant is now very close to the end of its nuclear-burning lifetime.

  20. Red Giant and Planetary Nebula Animation

  21. Planetary Nebula

  22. Planetary Nebula

  23. HR Diagram Planetary Nebula

  24. 1 Msun Evolution Summary

  25. 1 Msun Evolution Animation

  26. Sirius B • White Dwarfs Mass 1.1 solar masses Radius 0.008 solar radii (5500 km) Luminosity (total) 0.04 solar luminosities (1.6 x1025 W) Surface temperature 24,000 K Average density 3x109 kg/m3

  27. Higher Mass Stars M > Msun

  28. Core Carbon Fusion

  29. Onion Skin Layers

  30. Iron Core

  31. Nuclear Products • High Mass Stars

  32. Energy Generation

  33. SuperNova

  34. High Mass Stars

  35. Life and Death

  36. h and C Persei

  37. Globular Cluster

  38. Horizontal Giant Branch

More Related