STELLAR EVOLUTION. STELLAR EVOLUTION What is a star? A star is a huge ball of hot gas, held together by its own gravity. Most of the gas is hydrogen.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Life Cycle of a Star.
Advertisements

Life Cycle of Stars. Omega / Swan Nebula (M17) Stars are born from great clouds of gas and dust called Stars are born from great clouds of gas and dust.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
DO NOW QUESTION What life stage is our Sun currently in? What do you think will happen to our Sun as it gets older?
Stars What are they?.
NOT THOSE TYPES OF STARS! LIFE CYCLE OF STARS WHAT IS A STAR? Star = ball of plasma undergoing nuclear fusion. Stars give off large amounts of energy.
THE LIFE CYCLES OF STARS. In a group, create a theory that explains: (a)The origin of stars Where do they come from? (b)The death of stars Why do stars.
Stellar Life Stages Star Birth and Death.
Stellar Evolution. Clouds of gas and dust are floating around in space These are called “nebula”
Life Cycle of Stars. Stars are born in Nebulae Vast clouds of gas and dust Composed mostly of hydrogen and helium Some cosmic event triggers the collapse.
A cloud of gas and dust collapses due to gravity.
Stars.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Stars By: Mary Aragon Theory of Relativity. What are stars?  Enormous balls of gas  Made mostly of hydrogen and helium  Constant nuclear process (fusion)
A Note Taking Experience.
Life Cycle of the Stars. The Making of the Star Stars are formed in nebulae, which are large clouds of dust and gas. Some of these clouds can get be up.
Life Cycle of Stars Birth Place of Stars:
Studying the Lives of Stars  Stars don’t last forever  Each star is born, goes through its life cycle, and eventually die.
Life Cycle of a Star The changes that a star goes through is determined by how much mass the star has. Two Types of Life Cycles: Average Star- a star with.
The Life Cycle of Stars. Cycle for all stars Stage One- Born in vast, dense clouds of gas, mostly hydrogen along with small amounts of helium, and dust.
The Life Cycle of Stars.
Main sequence Hydrogen Fusion: Inside the sun, 4 Hydrogen nuclei fuse to form 1 Helium nucleus, releasing light, heat and radiation.
Topic: The Life Cycle of Stars PSSA: D/S8.D.3.1.
THE LIFE CYCLE OF A STAR Objective: I will compare and contrast the life cycle of stars based on their mass.
Stellar Evolution From Nebula to Neutron Star. Basic Structure The more massive the star the hotter it is, the hotter it is the brighter it burns Mass.
LIFECYCLE OF A STAR. TYPES OF STARS Dwarfs - Smaller stars are called dwarf stars. Red and yellow stars are generally called dwarfs. A white dwarf is.
Life Cycle of a Star! Chapter 28 Section 3.
A Star’s Life Cycle EQ: How do stars live and die?
Stellar Evolution. Structure Mass governs a star’s temperature, luminosity, and diameter Hydrostatic Equilibrium – the balance between gravity squeezing.
Life cycle of a Star By Kailyn and Krystal
Life Cycle of Stars 1st Step: Stars form from nebulas
Formation of Stars.
12-2 Notes How Stars Shine Chapter 12, Lesson 2.
Handout 2-1a Stellar Evolution.
25.2 Stellar Evolution Objectives
Life Cycle of Stars 1st Step: Stars form from nebulas
Astronomy-Part 4 Notes: The Life Cycle of Stars
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Properties of Stars.
Life Cycle of Stars 1st Step: Stars form from nebulas
Notes using the foldable
Astronomy-Part 4 Notes: The Life Cycle of Stars
Life Cycle of Stars.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Main Sequence Stars Once the star has ignited, it becomes a main sequence star. Main Sequence stars fuse hydrogen to form helium, releasing enormous.
Life Cycle of a Star.
Evolution of Stars Lesson 3 page 816.
A Note Taking Experience.
Life Cycle of a Star.
Life Cycle of Stars 1st Step: Stars form from nebulas
How are stars born? Galaxies are clouds of dust and gas called nebulae
The Life Cycle of a Star.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Life Cycle of the Stars.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Life Cycle of a Star.
Life cycle of a star - foldable
Stars form from nebulas Regions of concentrated dust and gas
Chapter 14.2 The Evolution of Stars.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Life Cycle of Stars 1st Step: Stars form from nebulas
Life Cycle of Stars 1st Step: Stars form from nebulas
Life-Cycle of Stars.
Lives of Stars.
How Stars are created, How stars change, How stars die.
How are stars born? Galaxies are clouds of dust and gas called nebulae
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Life Cycle of Stars 1st Step: Stars form from nebulas
Presentation transcript:

STELLAR EVOLUTION

What is a star? A star is a huge ball of hot gas, held together by its own gravity. Most of the gas is hydrogen - helium is the second most common. The gravity of the huge ball of gas forces the atoms together so strongly they fuse together. This nuclear fusion gives off energy- mostly heat and light.

A STAR IS BORN New stars form from huge clouds of dust. A new generation of stars is currently forming in these pillars of dust.

balanced forces The gravity of all that matter pulls in toward the center. The heat generated by the nuclear fusion pushes out. Balanced forces give a stable star.

Main Sequence Star The hydrogen in the core is the fuel for the nuclear reaction that is the source of the star’s energy.

Main Sequence Stars Energy source is the fusion of hydrogen to form helium. Can be as small as 1/10 mass of the sun Can be as big as 60 times the mass of the Sun

Red Giant The hydrogen fuel supply runs low. Helium fusion begins in the core. Outer layers expand.

Main sequence star death Fusion fuel is used up star collapses ejects dust and gas cloud remains form a white dwarf star life cycle is about 10 billion years

The Death of an Evolved, Massive Star The iron core will not ignite to induce further nuclear burning as has happened earlier to the helium, carbon-oxygen, and other cores. Iron fusion doesn’t release energy.

supernova

Crab nebula This is the dust cloud visible today that is left from a supernova in 1054.

Supernova remnant Remnants release X-rays contain dust with wide variety of elements

remnants

BLACK HOLES A black hole could form if a star collapsed into one small area. All the matter, and all the gravity of the star would be in an area so small, even light would not escape.

Size comparison