Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture PowerPoint Chapter 20 Astronomy Today, 5th edition Chaisson
Advertisements

Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections
Life as a Low-mass Star Image: Eagle Nebula in 3 wavebands (Kitt Peak 0.9 m).
Stellar Evolution. The Mass-Luminosity Relation Our goals for learning: How does a star’s mass affect nuclear fusion?
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Clicker Questions Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution.
Life Cycles of Stars.
Stellar Evolution. Basic Structure of Stars Mass and composition of stars determine nearly all of the other properties of stars Mass and composition of.
Stellar Explosions. Introduction Life after Death for White Dwarfs The End of a High-Mass Star Supernovae Supernova 1987A The Crab Nebula in Motion The.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
4 August 2005AST 2010: Chapter 211 Stars: From Adolescence to Old Age.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution.
Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution
Chapter 20 Stellar Evolution
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 20.
Chapter 21 Stellar Explosions. 21.1Life after Death for White Dwarfs 21.2The End of a High-Mass Star 21.3Supernovae Supernova 1987A The Crab Nebula in.
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 21.
Chapter 19 Star Formation (Birth) Chapter 20 Stellar Evolution (Life) Chapter 21 Stellar Explosions (Death) Few issues in astronomy are more basic than.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 20 Stellar Evolution.
Age of M13: 14 billion years. Mass of stars leaving the main-sequence ~0.8 solar masses Main Sequence Sub- giants Giants Helium core- burning stars.
Chapter 21 Stellar Explosions Life after Death for White Dwarfs A nova is a star that flares up very suddenly and then returns slowly to its former.
Lifecycle Lifecycle of a main sequence G star Most time is spent on the main-sequence (normal star)
Stellar Evolution: After the main Sequence Beyond hydrogen: The making of the elements.
1 Stellar Lifecycles The process by which stars are formed and use up their fuel. What exactly happens to a star as it uses up its fuel is strongly dependent.
Chapter 17 Star Stuff.
Quiz #6 Most stars form in the spiral arms of galaxies Stars form in clusters, with all types of stars forming. O,B,A,F,G,K,M Spiral arms barely move,
The Lives and Deaths of Stars
Life Cycle of a Star Star Life Cycle: Stars are like humans. They are born, live and then die.
Stellar Lifecycles The process by which stars are formed and use up their fuel. What exactly happens to a star as it uses up its fuel is strongly dependent.
9. Evolution of Massive Stars: Supernovae. Evolution up to supernovae: the nuclear burning sequence; the iron catastrophe. Supernovae: photodisintigration;
Red Giant Phase to Remnant (Chapter 10). Student Learning Objective Describe or diagram the evolutionary phases from the beginning of stellar formation.
- HW Ch. 10, EXTENDED Mon. Nov. 8 - HW Ch. 11 & 12, due Mon. Nov HW Ch. 13 & 14 due Mon. Nov. 22 Exam 3 on Tuesday Nov. 23.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. We cannot observe a single star going through its whole life cycle; even short-lived stars live too long for that. Observation.
Death of Stars. Lifecycle Lifecycle of a main sequence G star Most time is spent on the main-sequence (normal star)
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution Lecture Outline.
Chapter 12: Stellar Evolution. Most stars spend a majority of their lives (~90%) on the main sequence (about 10 billion years for our Sun) Virtually all.
Stellar Evolution Chapters 16, 17 & 18. Stage 1: Protostars Protostars form in cold, dark nebulae. Interstellar gas and dust are the raw materials from.
Stellar Evolution (Star Life-Cycle). Basic Structure Mass governs a star’s temperature, luminosity, and diameter. In fact, astronomers have discovered.
Bellringer 1._______ is the 1 st appearance of a star on the HR diagram (Stage 4) 2._______ is what everything on the HR diagram is measured against. 3._______.
Study of the universe (Earth as a planet and beyond)
Equivalent Grade In PowerSchools PowerSchoolsActual 86%F 90%D 92%C 95%B 98%A.
Chapter 17 Star Stuff.
Ch 12--Life Death of Stars
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Stellar Evolution Life Cycle of stars.
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Stellar Evolution.
Stellar Evolution Chapters 16, 17 & 18.
Section 3: Stellar Evolution
Astronomy-Part 4 Notes: The Life Cycle of Stars
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Astronomy-Part 4 Notes: The Life Cycle of Stars
The Life Cycle of a Star.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Outline of Ch 11: The H-R Diagram (cont.)
The Life Cycle of a Star.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Goals Explain why stars evolve Explain how stars of different masses evolve Describe two types of supernova Explain where the heavier elements come from.
You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members. Astronomers observe stars of different ages to infer how stars.
Stellar evolution and star clusters
Evolution of the Solar System
You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members. Astronomers observe stars of different ages to infer how stars.
The Life and Death of a Star
Astronomy Star Notes.
You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members. Astronomers observe stars of different ages to infer how stars.
Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution
The lifecycles of stars
Life of a Star.
Stellar Evolution Chapter 30.2.
90% of all stars are main sequence.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution

Units of Chapter 12 Leaving the Main Sequence Evolution of a Sun-like Star The Death of a Low-Mass Star Evolution of Stars More Massive than the Sun Supernova Explosions Observing Stellar Evolution in Star Clusters The Cycle of Stellar Evolution Summary of Chapter 12

12.1 Leaving the Main Sequence During its stay on the main sequence, any fluctuations in a star’s condition are quickly restored; the star is in equilibrium.

Eventually, as hydrogen in the core is consumed, the star begins to leave the main sequence. Its evolution from then on depends very much on the mass of the star: Low-mass stars go quietly. High-mass stars go out with a bang!

Even while on the main sequence, the composition of a star’s core is changing.

12.2 Evolution of a Sun-like Star As the fuel in the core is used up, the core contracts; when it is used up the core begins to collapse. Hydrogen begins to fuse outside the core.

Stages of a star leaving the main sequence.

Stage 9: The red giant branch: As the core continues to shrink, the outer layers of the star expand and cool. It is now a red giant, extending out as far as the orbit of Mercury. Despite its cooler temperature, its luminosity increases enormously due to its large size.

The red giant stage on the H–R diagram

Stage 10: Helium fusion Once the core temperature has risen to 100,000,000 K, the helium in the core starts to fuse. The helium flash: Helium begins to fuse extremely rapidly; within hours the enormous energy output is over, and the star once again reaches equilibrium.

Stage 10 on the H–R diagram

Stage 11: Back to the giant branch: As the helium in the core fuses to carbon, the core becomes hotter and hotter, and the helium burns faster and faster. The star is now similar to its condition just as it left the main sequence, except now there are two shells.

The star has become a red giant for the second time.

12.3 The Death of a Low-Mass Star This graphic shows the entire evolution of a Sun-like star. Such stars never become hot enough for fusion past carbon to take place.

There is no more outward fusion pressure being generated in the core, which continues to contract. Stage 12: The outer layers of the star expand to form a planetary nebula.

The star now has two parts: A small, extremely dense carbon core An envelope about the size of our solar system. The envelope is called a planetary nebula, even though it has nothing to do with planets – early astronomers viewing the fuzzy envelope thought it resembled a planetary system.

Stages 13 and 14: White and black dwarfs: Once the nebula has gone, the remaining core is extremely dense and extremely hot, but quite small. It is luminous only due to its high temperature.

The small star Sirius B is a white dwarf companion of the much larger and brighter Sirius A.

The Hubble Space Telescope has detected white dwarf stars in globular clusters

As the white dwarf cools, its size does not change significantly; it simply gets dimmer and dimmer, and finally ceases to glow.

A nova is a star that flares up very suddenly and then returns slowly to its former luminosity.

A white dwarf that is part of a semi-detached binary system can undergo repeated novas.

Material falls onto the white dwarf from its main-sequence companion. When enough material has accreted, fusion can reignite very suddenly, burning off the new material. Material keeps being transferred to the white dwarf, and the process repeats.

As the sun ages, the chemical composition of its core changes so that it contains a lower percentage of ______ and a greater percentage of ______. helium, hydrogen hydrogen, helium uranium, lead oxygen, carbon

Which of the following is not true of red giants their average density is very low. molecules are prominent in their spectra. most are variable stars. most are pre-main sequence stars.

As a one solar mass star evolves to the red giant stage: its surface temperature and its luminosity increase. its surface temperature and its luminosity decrease. its luminosity decreases and its surface temperature increases. its luminosity increases and its surface temperature decreases.

After a star's core runs out of fuel, how does the core get to a high enough temperature to ignite the next stage of fusion reactions? by chemical reactions. by other fusion reactions. by gravitational contraction. none of these; the fusion reactions stop.

Which of the following are old stars with no current nuclear reactions? red giants main sequence stars white dwarfs proto stars

12.4 Evolution of Stars More Massive than the Sun It can be seen from this H–R diagram that stars more massive than the Sun follow very different paths when leaving the main sequence.

High-mass stars, like all stars, leave the main sequence when there is no more hydrogen fuel in their cores. The first few events are similar to those in lower-mass stars – first a hydrogen shell, then a core burning helium to carbon, surrounded by helium- and hydrogen-burning shells.

Stars with masses more than 2 Stars with masses more than 2.5 solar masses do not experience a helium flash – helium burning starts gradually. A 4-solar-mass star makes no sharp moves on the H–R diagram – it moves smoothly back and forth.

The sequence below, of actual Hubble images, shows first a very massive star, then a very unstable red giant star as it emits a burst of light, illuminating the dust around it.

A star of more than 8 solar masses can fuse elements far beyond carbon in its core, leading to a very different fate. Its path across the H–R diagram is essentially a straight line – it stays at just about the same luminosity as it cools off. Eventually the star dies in a violent explosion called a supernova.

12.5 Supernova Explosions A supernova is incredibly luminous, as can be seen from these curves – more than a million times as bright as a nova.

A supernova is a one-time event – once it happens, there is little or nothing left of the progenitor star. There are two different types of supernovae, both equally common: Type I, which is a carbon-detonation supernova; Type II, which is the death of a high-mass star.

Carbon-detonation supernova: White dwarf that has accumulated too much mass from binary companion If the white dwarf’s mass exceeds 1.4 solar masses, electron degeneracy can no longer keep the core from collapsing. Carbon fusion begins throughout the star almost simultaneously, resulting in a carbon explosion.

This graphic illustrates the two different types of supernovae.

Supernovae leave remnants – the expanding clouds of material from the explosion. The Crab Nebula is a remnant from a supernova explosion that occurred in the year 1054.

12.6 Observing Stellar Evolution in Star Clusters The following series of H–R diagrams shows how stars of the same age, but different masses, appear as the cluster as a whole ages. After 10 million years, the most massive stars have already left the main sequence, whereas many of the least massive have not even reached it yet.

After 100 million years, a distinct main-sequence turnoff begins to develop. This shows the highest-mass stars that are still on the main sequence. After 1 billion years, the main-sequence turnoff is much clearer.

After 10 billion years, a number of features are evident: The red giant, subgiant, asymptotic giant, and horizontal branches are all clearly populated. White dwarfs, indicating that solar-mass stars are in their last phases, also appear.

This double cluster, h and  Persei, must be quite young – its H–R diagram is that of a newborn cluster. Its age cannot be more than about 10 million years.

The Hyades cluster, shown here, is also rather young; its main-sequence turnoff indicates an age of about 600 million years.

This globular cluster, M80, is about 10-12 billion years old, much older than the previous examples.

12.7 The Cycle of Stellar Evolution Star formation is cyclical: stars form, evolve, and die. In dying, they send heavy elements into the interstellar medium. These elements then become parts of new stars. And so it goes.

Massive stars have short lifetimes because they have little available fuel. can't sustain high enough temperatures. are too large. consume their fuel more rapidly.

Which of the following is the single most important indicator of how a star will evolve? Radius (size). Chemical composition. Mass. Surface temperature.

Which of the following stars is probably oldest? A one solar mass main sequence star. A one solar mass white dwarf. A ten solar mass main sequence star. A ten solar mass red giant.

Which of the following is not a necessary ingredient in the construction of a theoretical star model? A balance between gravity and gas pressure. A knowledge of the star's position and motion in space. A knowledge of the star's mass and chemical composition. A balance between the star's luminosity and the amount of energy generated.

The more massive a main sequence star is, then the redder it is. more luminous it is. more time it spends on the main sequence. greater percentage of heavy elements it contains.

When a star dies, it becomes a supernova always. only if it is a few times more massive than the sun. only if it includes the whole galaxy. never.

Type I supernovae occur in interstellar clouds. binary star systems. young star clusters. globular clusters.

The crab nebula is a supernova remnant. a newly forming star. an h-2 region. a black hole.

A type II supernova explosion involves a massive, population I star. blows off a large fraction of the star's mass. peaks about a month after the explosion begins. all of the above. none of the above.

Stellar remnants with masses between 1.4 and 3 solar masses will be white dwarfs. neutron stars. black holes. planetary nebulae.

Summary of Chapter 12 Once hydrogen is gone in the core, a star burns hydrogen in the surrounding shell. The core contracts and heats; the outer atmosphere expands and cools. Helium begins to fuse in the core, as a helium flash. The star expands into a red giant as the core continues to collapse. The envelope blows off, leaving a white dwarf to gradually cool. Nova results from material accreting onto a white dwarf from a companion star.

Summary of Chapter 12, cont. Massive stars become hot enough to fuse carbon, then heavier elements, all the way to iron. At the end, the core collapses and rebounds as a Type II supernova. Type I supernova is a carbon explosion, occurring when too much mass falls onto a white dwarf. All heavy elements are formed in stellar cores or in supernovae. Stellar evolution can be understood by observing star clusters.