SOLAR SYSTEM AND STAR FORMATION
Solar System and Star Formation Both happen at the same time, but we’ll look at the two events separately
Solar System Formation Ingredients: 1 cold solar nebula (-442°F) made up of dust and gas left over from the big bang 1 shockwave, perhaps from a nearby supernova
The Eagle Nebula 7,000 light years from Earth
Solar System Formation Shockwave causes gas and dust to compress Even small objects have gravity, so nebula begins to collapse inward and rotate This forms a protoplanetary (early planet) disk... but why?
Solar System Formation Nebula rotated slowly at first As nebula collapsed, it rotated faster and flattened out
Solar System Formation Eventually, a star forms at the center of the protoplanetary disk (more on this in just a bit) Throughout the disk, small, solid pieces of matter come together through the process of accretion The resulting small, irregularly shaped planetisimals have constant collisions, eventually becoming protoplanets
Solar System Formation Eventually, protoplanets become large enough to exert gravity on surrounding objects With gravity, protoplanets become rounder and continue to grow into true planets
Solar System Formation Evidence for ‘Disk’ Theory Most planets rotate in the same direction All planets revolve in the same direction Planet’s orbits are all in the same plane (almost)
Star Formation Ingredients: 1 cold solar nebula (-442°F) made up of dust and gas left over from the big bang 1 shockwave, perhaps from a nearby supernova Wait a minute...
Star Formation Shockwave compresses dust and gas Most of the gas and dust in the nebula clumps together in the center of the protoplanetary disk Eventually, it gets big enough to get hot through increased friction and becomes a protostar
When the temperature in the star reaches 10 million °Kelvin (~20 million °F), Hydrogen fusion begins If the star does not have critical mass, the chain reaction does not continue The result is a brown dwarf star with no heat or light If star does have critical mass, it enters main sequence Star Formation
Main Sequence Longest portion of the solar life cycle Hydrogen fusion occurs Outward force of fusion equals inward pull of gravity Star Life Cycle
Main Sequence Fusion continues, gradually forming larger and larger elements, which sink to the core This happens until Iron (Fe) or Carbon (C) form and/or Hydrogen fuel runs out, then the star dies For a star like our sun, this takes ~10 billion years Star Life Cycle
Hydrogen fuel begins to run out, the core cools and contracts As the core contracts, fusion continues up through Carbon Hydrogen fusion continues in outer layers Outer portion of star expands into a red giant Compared to our sun it will be bright, cool and large Death of a Low Mass Star (Up to 1.5 times the size of the sun)
Eventually, outer layer is blown away in a burst of gas called a nova All that is left is a planetary nebula and a white dwarf Small, dense, and cool Death of a Low Mass Star
Hydrogen fuel begins to run out, the core cools and contracts Due to greater mass, as the core contracts, fusion continues up through Iron Hydrogen fusion continues in outer layers Outer portion of star expands into a red super giant Compared to our sun it will be bright, cool and huge Death of a High Mass Star (More than 1.5 times the size of the sun)
Red Giant vs Red Supergiant
Fusion cannot proceed past Iron When Iron in core reaches 1.44 times the mass of our sun (Chandrasekhar Limit) there is not enough outward energy, so gravity wins and the star implodes The implosion continues until gravity creates enough energy for a rebound explosion: a supernova A Fairly Big Bang: Supernova
Supernova 1987A
Supernova releases as much energy in a few weeks as our sun will release in 10 billion years Brighter than a galaxy for a short period of time Energy causes fusion of all natural elements above Iron Core of star collapses to unimaginable density A Fairly Big Bang: Supernova
Star Life Cycle
Stars between 1.5 and 25 times the size of our sun become neutron stars After supernova, electrons and protons of all remaining mass compress and become neutrons All atomic space is gone Result is the size of a city Can be pulsars or magnetars After the Fact: Neutron Stars
Stars greater than 25 times the size of our sun become black holes After supernova, all remaining mass collapses into infinitely small point called a singularity immense mass / 0 volume = undefined (infinite) density After the Fact: Black Holes
Gravity is so strong even light cannot escape Surface or edge of black hole defined by event horizon Point at which nothing can escape Also a bad movie After the Fact: Black Holes
Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) Diagram