1 / 63

Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium

Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium. Units of Chapter 11. Interstellar Matter Star-Forming Regions Dark Dust Clouds The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Stars of Other Masses Star Clusters. Question 1. a) there are no stars there.

bien
Download Presentation

Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium

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. Chapter 11The Interstellar Medium

  2. Units of Chapter 11 Interstellar Matter Star-Forming Regions Dark Dust Clouds The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Stars of Other Masses Star Clusters

  3. Question 1 a) there are no stars there. b) stars in that direction are obscured by interstellar gas. c) stars in that direction are obscured by interstellar dust. d) numerous black holes capture all the starlight behind them. Some regions of the Milky Way’s disk appear dark because

  4. Question 1 a) there are no stars there. b) stars in that direction are obscured by interstellar gas. c) stars in that direction are obscured by interstellar dust. d) numerous black holes capture all the starlight behind them. Some regions of the Milky Way’s disk appear dark because Dust grains are about the same size as visible light, and they can scatter or block the shorter wavelengths.

  5. Interstellar Matter The interstellar medium consists of gas and dust. Gas is atoms and small molecules, mostly hydrogen and helium. Dust is more like soot or smoke; larger clumps of particles. Dust absorbs light, and reddens light that gets through. This image shows distinct reddening of stars near the edge of the dust cloud.

  6. Interstellar Matter Dust clouds absorb blue light preferentially; spectral lines do not shift.

  7. Question 2 When a star’s visible light passes through interstellar dust, the light we see a) is dimmed and reddened. b) appears to twinkle. c) is Doppler shifted. d) turns bluish in color. e) ionizes the dust and creates emission lines.

  8. Question 2 When a star’s visible light passes through interstellar dust, the light we see a) is dimmed and reddened. b) appears to twinkle. c) is Doppler shifted. d) turns bluish in color. e) ionizes the dust and creates emission lines. The same process results in wonderful sunsets, as dust in the air scatters the Sun’s blue light, leaving dimmer, redder light.

  9. Question 3 a) outer envelopes of dying stars that drift gently into space. b) remnants of stars that die by supernova. c) clouds of gas and dust in interstellar space. d) distant galaxies seen beyond our Milky Way. e) All of the above are correct. Astronomers use the term nebula to refer to

  10. Question 3 a) outer envelopes of dying stars that drift gently into space. b) remnants of stars that die by supernova. c) clouds of gas and dust in interstellar space. d) distant galaxies seen beyond our Milky Way. e) All of the above are correct. Astronomers use the term nebula to refer to Nebula refers to any fuzzy patch – bright or dark – in the sky.

  11. Star-Forming Regions “Nebula” is a general term used for fuzzy objects in the sky. Dark nebula: dust cloud Emission nebula: glows, due to hot stars

  12. Question 4 a) 90% hydrogen, 9% helium, and 1% heavier elements. b) molecules including water and CO2. c) 50% hydrogen, 50% helium. d) hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. e) 99% hydrogen, and 1% heavier elements. Interstellar gas is composed primarily of

  13. Question 4 a) 90% hydrogen, 9% helium, and 1% heavier elements. b) molecules including water and CO2. c) 50% hydrogen, 50% helium. d) hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. e) 99% hydrogen, and 1% heavier elements. Interstellar gas is composed primarily of The composition of interstellar gas mirrors that of the Sun, stars, and the jovian planets.

  14. Star-Forming Regions These nebulae are very large and have very low density; their size means that their masses are large despite the low density.

  15. Star-Forming Regions This is the central section of the Milky Way Galaxy, showing several nebulae, areas of star formation.

  16. Question 5 a) gas and dust is moving away from Earth. b) hydrogen gas is present. c) dying stars have recently exploded. d) cool red stars are hidden inside. e) dust is present. The reddish color of emission nebulae indicates that

  17. Question 5 a) gas and dust is moving away from Earth. b) hydrogen gas is present. c) dying stars have recently exploded. d) cool red stars are hidden inside. e) dust is present. The reddish color of emission nebulae indicates that Glowing hydrogen gas emits red light around the Horsehead nebula.

  18. Star-Forming Regions Emission nebulae generally glow red – this is the Hα line of hydrogen. The dust lanes visible in the previous image are part of the nebula, and are not due to intervening clouds.

  19. Star-Forming Regions How nebulae work

  20. Star-Forming Regions There is a strong interaction between the nebula and the stars within it; the fuzzy areas near the pillars are due to photoevaporation.

  21. Star-Forming Regions Emission nebulae are made of hot, thin gas, which exhibits distinct emission lines.

  22. Tarantula Nebula

  23. Dark Dust Clouds Average temperature of dark dust clouds is a few tens of kelvins. These clouds absorb visible light (left), and emit radio wavelengths (right).

  24. Dark Dust Clouds This cloud is very dark, and can be seen only because of the background stars.

  25. Dark Dust Clouds The Horsehead Nebula is a particularly distinctive dark dust cloud.

  26. Dark Dust Clouds Interstellar gas emits low-energy radiation, due to a transition in the hydrogen atom.

  27. Question 6 a) its radio waves pass unaffected through clouds of interstellar dust. b) it arises from cool helium gas present throughout space. c) it can be detected with optical telescopes. d) it is produced by protostars. e) it reveals the structure of new stars. 21-centimeter radiation is important because

  28. Question 6 a) its radio waves pass unaffected through clouds of interstellar dust. b) it arises from cool helium gas present throughout space. c) it can be detected with optical telescopes. d) it is produced by protostars. e) it reveals the structure of new stars. 21-centimeter radiation is important because Cool atomic hydrogen gas produces 21-cm radio radiation as its electron “flips” its direction of spin.

  29. Dark Dust Clouds This is a contour map of H2CO near the M20 Nebula. Other molecules that can be useful for mapping out these clouds are carbon dioxide and water. Here, the red and green lines correspond to different rotational transitions. (frequencies)

  30. Dark Dust Clouds These are CO (carbon monoxide) emitting clouds in the outer Milky Way, probably corresponding to regions of star formation.

  31. Question 7 a) in the photospheres of red giant stars. b) primarily inside dense dust clouds. c) in the coronas of stars like our Sun. d) scattered evenly throughout interstellar space. e) surrounding energetic young stars. Complex molecules in space are found

  32. Question 7 a) in the photospheres of red giant stars. b) primarily inside dense dust clouds. c) in the coronas of stars like our Sun. d) scattered evenly throughout interstellar space. e) surrounding energetic young stars. Complex molecules in space are found A radio telescope image of the outer portion of the Milky Way, revealing molecular cloud complexes.

  33. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Star formation happens when part of a dust cloud begins to contract under its own gravitational force; as it collapses, the center becomes hotter and hotter until nuclear fusion begins in the core.

  34. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun When looking at just a few atoms, the gravitational force is nowhere near strong enough to overcome the random thermal motion. 1057

  35. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Stars go through a number of stages in the process of forming from an interstellar cloud.

  36. Question 8 a) Clouds fragment into smaller objects, forming many stars at one time. b) One star forms; other matter goes into planets, moons, asteroids, & comets. c) Clouds rotate & throw off mass until only enough is left to form one star. How dosinglestars form within huge clouds of interstellar gas and dust?

  37. Question 8 a) Clouds fragment into smaller objects, forming many stars at one time. b) One star forms; other matter goes into planets, moons, asteroids, & comets. c) Clouds rotate & throw off mass until only enough is left to form one star. How do single stars form within huge clouds of interstellar gas and dust? The theory of star formation predicts stars in a cluster would form about the same time.

  38. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Stage 1: Interstellar cloud starts to contract, probably triggered by shock or pressure wave from nearby star. As it contracts, the cloud fragments into smaller pieces.

  39. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Stage 2: Individual cloud fragments begin to collapse. Once the density is high enough, there is no further fragmentation. Stage 3: The interior of the fragment has begun heating, and is about 10,000 K.

  40. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun The Orion Nebula is thought to contain interstellar clouds in the process of condensing, as well as protostars. Orion Nebula Mosaic

  41. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Stage 4: The core of the cloud is now a protostar, and makes its first appearance on the H–R diagram.

  42. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun These jets are being emitted as material condenses onto a protostar.

  43. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun These protostars are in Orion.

  44. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun Planetary formation has begun, but the protostar is still not in equilibrium – all heating comes from the gravitational collapse.

  45. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun The last stages can be followed on the H–R diagram: The protostar’s luminosity decreases even as its temperature rises because it is becoming more compact.

  46. The Formation of Stars Like the Sun At stage 6, the core reaches 10 million K, and nuclear fusion begins. The protostar has become a star. The star continues to contract and increase in temperature, until it is in equilibrium. This is stage 7: the star has reached the main sequence and will remain there as long as it has hydrogen to fuse in its core.

  47. Stars of Other Masses This H–R diagram shows the evolution of stars somewhat more and somewhat less massive than the Sun. The shape of the paths is similar, but they wind up in different places on the main sequence.

  48. Stars of Other Masses If the mass of the original nebular fragment is too small, nuclear fusion will never begin. These “failed stars” are called brown dwarfs.

  49. Star Clusters Because a single interstellar cloud can produce many stars of the same age and composition, star clusters are an excellent way to study the effect of mass on stellar evolution.

More Related