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The Lives of Stars

The Lives of Stars. The Deaths of Giants. Last Time. Last time, we traced the evolution of a star, starting with the cloud of gas from which it forms Denser patches of these molecular clouds begin to grow, as their gravity attracts more mass. Last Time. These dense clumps continue to grow

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The Lives of Stars

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  1. The Lives of Stars The Deaths of Giants

  2. Last Time • Last time, we traced the evolution of a star, starting with the cloud of gas from which it forms • Denser patches of these molecular clouds begin to grow, as their gravity attracts more mass

  3. Last Time • These dense clumps continue to grow • As gravity increases the pressure, they heat up • Eventually, they start to radiate energy from gravitational collapse • These are called pre-main sequence stars

  4. Last Time • The lower mass limit for a star is about 0.08 solar masses (80 Jupiter masses) • Anything less massive cannot kick start fusion • The upper limit is about 150 solar masses • Smaller proto-stars join together to form these ultra-massive stars • They can only survive for a few hundred thousand years before they blow themselves apart

  5. Last Time • When the temperature gets high enough, they start to fuse Hydrogen into Helium, and a new start officially begins

  6. Last Time • The main sequence on the H-R diagram is defined by stars that are steadily fusing Hydrogen into Helium in their cores • Remember the properties of luminosity and main sequence lifetime, and how this relates to mass

  7. Last Time • While on the main sequence, stars are fairly normal • Things are well balanced, and the stars are happy • Some stars may still have interesting properties, like strong magnetic fields and starspots

  8. Last Time • When stars run out of Hydrogen in their cores, things start to get interesting • We followed the end-stages of life for a star with a mass 0.08 – 2 times the mass of the Sun

  9. Last Time • Once Hydrogen fusion is done in the core, all that is left is an inert ball of Helium • Hydrogen fusion now moves out into a shell around the core • The energy generated through this shell burning is greater than what was generated on the main sequence

  10. Last Time • This increased energy production increases the luminosity of the star, and causes the outer regions of the star to puff up and expand • This happens even though the shell and the core shrink

  11. Last Time • The temperature of the outer regions also goes down, and the star turns orange or red • This is called a sub-giant

  12. Last Time • Helium produced in the Hydrogen shell burning falls onto the inert Helium core • Eventually, the temperatures in the core reach about 100 million Kelvin • Helium now begins to fuse into Carbon

  13. Last Time • But the core is not supported by normal gas pressure • Instead, it is supported by degeneracy pressure • Increasing the temperature does not counteract gravity • The temperature and fusion rate start to increase in a runaway reaction

  14. Last Time • This is called a Helium flash • It is a fast, huge increase in the energy production of the star • Eventually, the temperatures get so high that normal gas pressure takes over again • The star balances itself out

  15. Last Time • Now, we have a core that is fusing Helium into Carbon, and a shell that is still fusing Hydrogen into Helium

  16. Last Time • Eventually, the Helium in the core is all turned into Carbon • Now, Helium is fused in a shell around the core • Hydrogen is burned in another shell • The star grows again, just as it did when it first burned Hydrogen in a shell

  17. Last Time • This is the Red Giant phase • It only lasts about 1 million years • The Sun will probably engulf the Earth

  18. Last Time • There is no hope of fusing Carbon • The star begins its final march towards death • The star blows away its outer layers, forming a planetary nebula

  19. Last Time • Finally, all that is left is a hot, but dead core of Carbon • It glows white hot, and is supported by degeneracy pressure • The electrons don’t want to get to close, so they resist gravity

  20. Last Time • As the white dwarf cools, it changes color, from white to yellow, red, and finally black • It is now just a dead ball of Carbon

  21. This Time • We will look at a high mass star, and trace its evolution

  22. High Mass Stars • Higher mass stars go through a slightly different process • The results are…explosive

  23. High Mass Stars • High mass stars spend their lives on the main sequence in a similar way to low mass stars • They burn hotter and brighter, and don’t live as long, but the same processes are at work

  24. High Mass Stars • High mass stars begin to differ from their low mass companions when Helium fusion begins • Rather than the rapid Helium flash of low mass stars, high mass stars begin to fuse Helium gradually

  25. Helium Fusion • High mass stars can make this switch smoothly because the temperatures are already high enough when Hydrogen fusion ends • No need for degeneracy pressure yet

  26. Helium Fusion • The stars will once again fuse Hydrogen in shells around the core • The star swells to become a super giant, just like the low mass stars become sub-giants and Red Giants

  27. Helium Fusion • Once the Helium in the core has been used up, Helium is fused in a shell around the core • This Helium came from the earlier Hydrogen shell • Hydrogen is now burned in the next shell up

  28. Carbon Fusion • Unlike in the low mass stars, the crush of gravity can raise temperatures high enough to fuse Carbon in the core • This occurs at about 600 million Kelvin

  29. Carbon Fusion • It is not long until the Carbon is used up • Now, the shell around the core begins fusing Carbon • Helium and Hydrogen are fused in successive shells

  30. Fusion of Heavier Elements • The temperatures in high mass stars can get so high that elements heaver than Carbon can be fused • Next in line is Oxygen

  31. Fusion of Heavier Elements • Once the Oxygen in the core is used up, Oxygen in a shell is fused • The core now starts to fuse Neon

  32. Fusion of Heavier Elements • This process continues, as heavier and heavier elements undergo fusion • Each time an element runs out in the core, it is burned in a shell • More shells build on one another

  33. Fusion of Heavier Elements • Next comes Magnesium, then Silicon

  34. 0 of 5 What is the heaviest element we can make in a star? • Chromium • Iron • Uranium

  35. Onions and Stars • Finally, the core turns into a lump of Iron • The star now resembles an onion, with many layers

  36. Onions and Stars • As we move from the core out towards the surface of the star, the density of each layer decreases

  37. Going Out With a Bang • When the core becomes Iron, the star has a problem • Iron cannot be fused • It has the highest binding energy of all the elements

  38. Going Out With a Bang

  39. Going Out With a Bang • If energy cannot come from the fusion of Iron, where will it come from? • Nowhere…the star is out of time

  40. Going Out With a Bang • The iron core begin to collapse, until degeneracy pressure comes to the rescue... • Or not…electrons can only do so much • Gravity is just too strong, electron degeneracy pressure cannot stop the collapse

  41. Going Out With a Bang • The overwhelming crush of gravity actually forces the electrons and protons together • They combine to make neutrons • Now all that remains are neutrons

  42. Going Out With a Bang • Without the electron degeneracy pressure, there is no support for the core • It collapses, going from something the size of the Earth to something the size of Charlottesville in seconds

  43. 0 of 5 Will anything stop the collapse of the core? • Yes, the fusion of iron • Yes, neutron degeneracy pressure • Nope

  44. Going Out With a Bang • Finally, something stops the collapse of the core • It is neutron degeneracy pressure • It is capable of supporting more weight than electron degeneracy pressure • It seems like the day is saved, but…

  45. Going Out With a Bang • What about all those outer layers? • When the core collapsed, there was nothing hold them up either • They started collapsing as well…

  46. Going Out With a Bang • You can imagine their surprise when they slam into that super-dense iron core at 70,000 km/s (156,000,000 mph) • What will happen?

  47. Endgame • The densest, inner layers slam into the core, followed by the less dense outer layers • Energy is transferred back through these layers, and a tremendous shock wave forms

  48. Endgame • The star rips itself apart, in an ultra-violent explosion called a supernova • This particular type of supernova is called a Type II, or core collapse supernova (Yes, there are Type I…)

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