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Evolution of High Mass Stars AST 112
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High Mass Stars So… what exactly do high mass stars do? The same thing as low mass stars: they get on the Main Sequence and convert H to He. Then they blow up!
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Life From Stars Need low mass stars for life – They live long enough to allow life to flourish Need high mass stars for life – They produce the elements heavier than carbon
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High Mass Stars: Main Sequence Low mass stars fuse H into He through the proton – proton chain – Slow! High mass stars fuse H into He through the CNO cycle – Fast!
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The CNO Cycle Recall that nuclear reactions happen when nuclei have enough kinetic energy to overcome electric repulsion High mass stars heat the cores to a higher temperature – H nuclei can now react with carbon, oxygen and nitrogen
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The CNO Cycle Carbon, nitrogen and oxygen act as catalysts – C, N, and O don’t get consumed; they just “help out” This is why high mass stars shine bright and die young.
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The CNO Cycle Text, Page 574: Did the first high-mass stars in the history of the universe produce energy through the CNO cycle?
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Hydrogen Exhaustion 25 M Sun star uses up its hydrogen in a few million years Quickly develops a hydrogen burning shell, outer layers expand Helium gradually begins to burn (no helium flash)
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Supergiant Core collapses, outer layers swell At this point, it’s a supergiant star.
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Burning Helium Star burns He for few hundred thousand years Runs out of He – Inert carbon core begins collapse Similar to low-mass star thus far
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Burning Carbon High-mass stars: HOT! – Easily reach 1,200,000,000 o F for carbon fusion Fuses carbon for a few hundred years, runs out
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He-Capture Reactions Helium nucleus fuses with heavier nuclei – Carbon to Oxygen – Oxygen to Neon – Neon to Magnesium Helium Capture Reactions
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Heavy Nucleus Reactions In the core: – Carbon + Oxygen -> Silicon – Oxygen + Oxygen -> Sulfur – Silicon + Silicon -> Iron Heavy-Nucleus Reactions
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What can you think of that came from the inside of a dying high-mass star?
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Advanced Nuclear Burning The core fuses elements, runs out, shrinks, heats, and fuses new elements This results in layers of heavy elements
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High Mass Stars: Advanced Nuclear Burning These sequential shells result in a zig-zag path about the HR diagram Most massive stars: outer layers don’t have time to respond!
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High Mass Stars: Advanced Nuclear Burning Iron starts to accumulate in the central core – Elements lighter than iron release energy when fused – Elements heavier than iron release energy when split
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High Mass Stars: Advanced Nuclear Burning Not energetically advantageous for iron to fuse / split …so it doesn’t.
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High Mass Stars: Advanced Nuclear Burning Iron is not undergoing nuclear reactions Doesn’t collapse – Electron degeneracy pressure (cramming too much stuff together) Iron keeps on piling up…
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Death of a High Mass Star A good way to remove electron degeneracy pressure: Get rid of the electrons!
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Death of a High Mass Star … and piling up and piling up… Conditions such that electrons combine with protons – Forms neutrons, releases neutrinos – Degeneracy pressure vanishes instantly
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Death of a High Mass Star In a split second, an iron core the size of Earth collapses into a sphere of neutrons 5-10 miles across and releases a torrent of neutrinos. This releases 100x the energy released by our Sun in its entire lifetime!
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Supernova
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Outer layers of the star get blown away – Mostly due to neutrinos – 6000 miles / second (3% speed of light!) The leftover core is either: – A neutron star if it’s small enough – A black hole if it’s large enough
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Supernova A supernova is so bright it can briefly outshine an entire galaxy! Bright for about a week, fades over months
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Neutron-Capture Reactions Where do elements heavier than iron come from? Rare reactions that capture a neutron – Neutron changes to proton – Repeats Requires high energy – Only happens close to and during supernova
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Nuclear Reactions: Observational Evidence Look at composition of stars, gas, dust in Milky Way Look at C, O, or Ne – Even number of protons – Come from He capture (+2 protons) – These can fuse together Elements heavier than iron are rare
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Notorious Supernova Remnants Messier 1, The Crab Nebula (in Taurus) Growing several thousand miles per second! Neutron star lives inside
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Notorious Supernova Remnants Re-tracing the Crab Nebula’s expansion puts the supernova at 1100 A.D. In the first year of the period Chih-ho, the fifth moon, the day chi-ch’ou, a guest star appeared approximately several [degrees] southeast of Thien-kuan. After more than a year it gradually became invisible. July 4, 1054 Taurus
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Notorious Supernova Remnants Supernova 1987A occurred in the Large Magellanic Cloud 150k LY away – Did the star explode in 1987?
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Milky Way Supernovas Four in the last 1000 years: – 1006 (So bright it cast shadows at night!) – 1054 (Just did that one) – 1572 (Tycho Brahe saw it) – 1604 (Kepler saw it)
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Betelgeuse The size of the star extends out past the orbit of Mars Its shape is pulsating 600 LY away… it’s safe.
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