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Published byPeregrine Scott Modified over 9 years ago
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The origin of the (lighter) elements The Late Stages of Stellar Evolution Supernova of 1604 (Kepler’s)
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High-Mass Stars > 8 M Sun Low-Mass Stars < 2 M Sun Intermediate- Mass Stars Brown Dwarfs
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Broken thermostat
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‘Helium flash’ Core of helium is supported by electron degeneracy pressure
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Helium burning stars are temporarily stable.
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After the Helium Flash
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After He fusion stops in the core… Variable stars: RR Lyrae Cepheids
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The Death of a Low-Mass Star: Planetary Nebula The Helix Nebula Remnants of stars with ~ 1 – a few M sun Radii: R ~ 0.2 - 3 light years Expanding at ~10 – 20 km/s ( Doppler shifts) Last < 10,000 years Have nothing to do with planets!
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The Formation of Planetary Nebulae The Ring Nebula in Lyra Two-stage process: Slow wind from a red giant blows away cool, outer layers of the star Fast wind from hot, inner layers of the star overtakes the slow wind and heats it => Planetary Nebula
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The Cat Eye Nebula: Approx 3000 LY away Central star T = 80,000 K Spectral class O Mass ~ 1 M sun Radius ~ 0.65 R sun
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The Cat Eye
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White Dwarfs are supported by electron degeneracy pressure in a low-mass star, Fusion stops after He -->C and O Just cools off and fizzles out Siruis and its white dwraf companion, Sirius B
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Summary: Evolution of a Sun-Like Star
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Earth’s Fate Sun’s luminosity will rise to 1,000 times its current level—too hot for life on Earth
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Earth’s Fate Sun’s radius will grow to near current radius of Earth’s orbit
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High mass stars : CNO Cycle H fusion is faster because C, N and O act as catalysts Same net result: 4 H become 1 He. No total gain or loss of C, N, O
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Life Stages of High-Mass Stars high-mass stars are similar to low-mass stars: –Hydrogen core fusion (main sequence) –Hydrogen shell burning (supergiant) –Helium core fusion (subgiant) They are also different.. –H-->He via CNO cycle not p-p chain –Core much hotter –fuse C, O into heavier elements –He core is not degenerate –no He flash! –Lose a lot of mass
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High-mass stars make the elements necessary for life!
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Big Bang made 90% H, 10% He – stars make everything else
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Helium fusion can make only carbon in low-mass stars
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Helium Capture occurs only in high-mass stars High core temperatures allow helium to fuse with heavier elements
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Helium capture builds C into O, Ne, Mg, … Total # of P+N = Multiples of 4! Why?
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Evidence for helium capture: Higher abundances of elements with even numbers of protons
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Advanced Nuclear Burning Core temperatures in stars with >8M Sun allow fusion of elements up to iron
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Si, S, Ca, Fe, etc. can only be made in high-mass stars
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Multiple Shell Burning Advanced nuclear burning proceeds in a series of nested shells
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Iron is “ash” of fusion: nuclear reactions involving iron do not release energy Iron-56 has lowest mass per nuclear particle Highest “binding energy” of all the elements Fusion releases energy only when the mass of the products < mass of the reactants
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How does a high-mass star die? Iron builds up in core until degeneracy pressure can no longer resist gravity
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Supernova Explosion Core degeneracy pressure cannot support degenerate core of > 1.4 M sun electrons forced into nucleus, combine with protons making neutrons, neutrinos and LOTS of energy!
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Collapse only takes very short amount of time (~seconds) Supernova!
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Energy and neutrons released in supernova explosion cause elements heavier than iron to form, including Au and U
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Neutron Stars & Supernova Remnants Energy released by collapse of core drives outer layers into space The Crab Nebula is the remnant of the supernova seen in A.D. 1054
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Supernova 1987A The first visible supernova in 400 years
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