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ASTR 1102-002 2008 Fall Semester

ASTR 1102-002 2008 Fall Semester. Joel E. Tohline, Alumni Professor Office: 247 Nicholson Hall [Slides from Lecture12]. Chapter 20 : Stellar Evolution: The Deaths of Stars. Main Sequence (MS). Stellar Masses along the MS. Masses obtained from Fig. 17-21 and Table 19-1.

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ASTR 1102-002 2008 Fall Semester

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  1. ASTR 1102-0022008 Fall Semester Joel E. Tohline, Alumni Professor Office: 247 Nicholson Hall [Slides from Lecture12]

  2. Chapter 20: Stellar Evolution:The Deaths of Stars

  3. Main Sequence (MS)

  4. Stellar Masses along the MS Masses obtained from Fig. 17-21 and Table 19-1

  5. Low-, Moderately Low-, & High-Mass Stars along the MS Terminology used throughout Chapter 20

  6. Main-sequence Lifetimes Lifetimes obtained from Table 19-1

  7. Low-, Moderately Low-, & High-Mass Stars along the MS Terminology used throughout Chapter 20

  8. Summary of Evolution • Low-Mass, “red dwarf” Stars (0.08 Msun£ M*£ 0.4 Msun) • Never leaves the main sequence • Fully convective all of the star’s hydrogen is eventually brought into the core for “burning” • Over hundreds of billions of years, evolves into an inert ball of helium • Boring!

  9. Summary of Evolution • Low-Mass, “red dwarf” Stars (0.08 Msun£ M*£ 0.4 Msun) • Never leaves the main sequence • Fully convective all of the star’s hydrogen is eventually brought into the core for “burning” • Over hundreds of billions of years, evolves into an inert ball of helium • Boring!

  10. Summary of Evolution • Low-Mass, “red dwarf” Stars (0.08 Msun£ M*£ 0.4 Msun) • Never leaves the main sequence • Fully convective all of the star’s hydrogen is eventually brought into the core for “burning” • Over hundreds of billions of years, evolves into an inert ball of helium • Boring!

  11. Summary of Evolution • Low-Mass, “red dwarf” Stars (0.08 Msun£ M*£ 0.4 Msun) • Never leaves the main sequence • Fully convective all of the star’s hydrogen is eventually brought into the core for “burning” • Over hundreds of billions of years, evolves into an inert ball of helium • Boring!

  12. Summary of Evolution • Low-Mass, “red dwarf” Stars (0.08 Msun£ M*£ 0.4 Msun) • Never leaves the main sequence • Fully convective all of the star’s hydrogen is eventually brought into the core for “burning” • Over hundreds of billions of years, evolves into an inert ball of helium • Boring!

  13. Low-, Moderately Low-, & High-Mass Stars along the MS Terminology used throughout Chapter 20

  14. Main-sequence Lifetimes Lifetimes obtained from Table 19-1

  15. Summary of Evolution • Moderately Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun) (0.4 Msun£ M*£ 4 Msun) • Helium may ignite via a “helium flash” • In red-giant phase, core helium fusion converts helium into carbon & oxygen; hydrogen fusion continues in a surrounding shell • After core no longer contains helium, star may enter “asymptotic giant branch (AGB)” phase; helium continues to burn in a shell that surrounds an inert C & O core • As AGB star, star’s radius is 1 AU or larger! • Outer envelope ejected (nonviolently) to reveal the hot, inner core  planetary nebula • This remnant core cools to become a “white dwarf”

  16. Summary of Evolution • Moderately Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun) (0.4 Msun£ M*£ 4 Msun) • Helium may ignite via a “helium flash” • In red-giant phase, core helium fusion converts helium into carbon & oxygen; hydrogen fusion continues in a surrounding shell • After core no longer contains helium, star may enter “asymptotic giant branch (AGB)” phase; helium continues to burn in a shell that surrounds an inert C & O core • As AGB star, star’s radius is 1 AU or larger! • Outer envelope ejected (nonviolently) to reveal the hot, inner core  planetary nebula • This remnant core cools to become a “white dwarf”

  17. Summary of Evolution • Moderately Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun) (0.4 Msun£ M*£ 4 Msun) • Helium may ignite via a “helium flash” • In red-giant phase, core helium fusion converts helium into carbon & oxygen; hydrogen fusion continues in a surrounding shell • After core no longer contains helium, star may enter “asymptotic giant branch (AGB)” phase; helium continues to burn in a shell that surrounds an inert C & O core • As AGB star, star’s radius is 1 AU or larger! • Outer envelope ejected (nonviolently) to reveal the hot, inner core  planetary nebula • This remnant core cools to become a “white dwarf”

  18. Summary of Evolution • Moderately Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun) (0.4 Msun£ M*£ 4 Msun) • Helium may ignite via a “helium flash” • In red-giant phase, core helium fusion converts helium into carbon & oxygen; hydrogen fusion continues in a surrounding shell • After core no longer contains helium, star may enter “asymptotic giant branch (AGB)” phase; helium continues to burn in a shell that surrounds an inert C & O core • As AGB star, star’s radius is 1 AU or larger! • Outer envelope ejected (nonviolently) to reveal the hot, inner core  planetary nebula • This remnant core cools to become a “white dwarf”

  19. Summary of Evolution • Moderately Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun) (0.4 Msun£ M*£ 4 Msun) • Helium may ignite via a “helium flash” • In red-giant phase, core helium fusion converts helium into carbon & oxygen; hydrogen fusion continues in a surrounding shell • After core no longer contains helium, star may enter “asymptotic giant branch (AGB)” phase; helium continues to burn in a shell that surrounds an inert C & O core • As AGB star, star’s radius is 1 AU or larger! • Outer envelope ejected (nonviolently) to reveal the hot, inner core  planetary nebula • This remnant core cools to become a “white dwarf”

  20. Structure of an AGB Star

  21. Summary of Evolution • Moderately Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun) (0.4 Msun£ M*£ 4 Msun) • Helium may ignite via a “helium flash” • In red-giant phase, core helium fusion converts helium into carbon & oxygen; hydrogen fusion continues in a surrounding shell • After core no longer contains helium, star may enter “asymptotic giant branch (AGB)” phase; helium continues to burn in a shell that surrounds an inert C & O core • As AGB star, star’s radius is 1 AU or larger! • Outer envelope ejected (nonviolently) to reveal the hot, inner core  planetary nebula • This remnant core cools to become a “white dwarf”

  22. Planetary Nebulae (PN) PN “Abell 39” Figure 20-6b

  23. Planetary Nebulae (PN) Infrared Image of PN “NGC 7027” Figure 20-6c

  24. Planetary Nebulae (PN) A planetary nebula located inside globular cluster M15 Figure 20-6a

  25. Planetary Nebulae (PN) • For more images of various planetary nebulae, see • http://hubblesite.org/gallery/album/nebula_collection/

  26. AGB  PN  white dwarf

  27. Summary of Evolution • Moderately Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun) (0.4 Msun£ M*£ 4 Msun) • Helium may ignite via a “helium flash” • In red-giant phase, core helium fusion converts helium into carbon & oxygen; hydrogen fusion continues in a surrounding shell • After core no longer contains helium, star may enter “asymptotic giant branch (AGB)” phase; helium continues to burn in a shell that surrounds an inert C & O core • As AGB star, star’s radius is 1 AU or larger! • Outer envelope ejected (nonviolently) to reveal the hot, inner core  planetary nebula • This remnant core cools to become a “white dwarf”

  28. AGB  PN  white dwarf

  29. Low-, Moderately Low-, & High-Mass Stars along the MS Terminology used throughout Chapter 20

  30. Main-sequence Lifetimes Lifetimes obtained from Table 19-1

  31. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (4 Msun£ M*) • Evolution begins as in lower-mass stars, through the fusion of He into C & O and into the “AGB” phase • But gravity is strong enough (because of the star’s larger mass) for succeeding stages of nuclear “burning” to be triggered • When the star exhausts a given variety of nuclear fuel in its core, the “ash” of the previous fusion stage is ignited • The star’s core develops an “onion skin” structure with various layers of burning shells separated by inert shells of various elements

  32. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (4 Msun£ M*) • Evolution begins as in lower-mass stars, through the fusion of He into C & O and into the “AGB” phase • But gravity is strong enough (because of the star’s larger mass) for succeeding stages of nuclear “burning” to be triggered • When the star exhausts a given variety of nuclear fuel in its core, the “ash” of the previous fusion stage is ignited • The star’s core develops an “onion skin” structure with various layers of burning shells separated by inert shells of various elements

  33. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (4 Msun£ M*) • Evolution begins as in lower-mass stars, through the fusion of He into C & O and into the “AGB” phase • But gravity is strong enough (because of the star’s larger mass) for succeeding stages of nuclear “burning” to be triggered • When the star exhausts a given variety of nuclear fuel in its core, the “ash” of the previous fusion stage is ignited • The star’s core develops an “onion skin” structure with various layers of burning shells separated by inert shells of various elements

  34. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (4 Msun£ M*) • Evolution begins as in lower-mass stars, through the fusion of He into C & O and into the “AGB” phase • But gravity is strong enough (because of the star’s larger mass) for succeeding stages of nuclear “burning” to be triggered • When the star exhausts a given variety of nuclear fuel in its core, the “ash” of the previous fusion stage is ignited • The star’s core develops an “onion skin” structure with various layers of burning shells separated by inert shells of various elements

  35. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (4 Msun£ M*) • Evolution begins as in lower-mass stars, through the fusion of He into C & O and into the “AGB” phase • But gravity is strong enough (because of the star’s larger mass) for succeeding stages of nuclear “burning” to be triggered • When the star exhausts a given variety of nuclear fuel in its core, the “ash” of the previous fusion stage is ignited • The star’s core develops an “onion skin” structure with various layers of burning shells separated by inert shells of various elements

  36. “Onion-skin” Structure ofHigh-mass Star’s Core Figure 20-13

  37. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (cont.) • Successive stages of nuclear fusion ignition proceed until elements in the “iron-nickel group” are formed • Any attempt by the star to fuse elements in the iron-nickel group into heavier elements is a disaster!

  38. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (cont.) • Successive stages of nuclear fusion ignition proceed until elements in the “iron-nickel group” are formed • Any attempt by the star to fuse elements in the iron-nickel group into heavier elements is a disaster!

  39. Summary of Evolution • High-Mass Stars (cont.) • Successive stages of nuclear fusion ignition proceed until elements in the “iron-nickel group” are formed • Any attempt by the star to fuse elements in the iron-nickel group into heavier elements proves to be a disaster!

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