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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 Lecture 16: Stellar Structure and Evolution – I Objectives: Understand energy transport in stars Examine their internal structure Follow their evolutionary paths in H-R diagram Energy Transport in Stars: Sun’s T C = 15 million K, T S = 5800 K energy (heat) must flow from core surface but what physical processes are involved ? Additional reading: Kaufmann (chap. 21-22), Zeilik (chap. 16)
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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 Energy Transport: possibilities are: 1)radiation 2)convection 3)conduction but only radiation and convection are important in normal stars although “radiation” is really more like “conduction” 1) Radiative Diffusion: Photons follow a random walk from centre to surface of star –absorbed and re-emitted many times (called “radiative diffusion”) before escaping e.g. in Sun’s core, mean distance travelled by photon = 0.1 mm! Expect luminosity L to be proportional to: –area = R 2 –temperature gradient = T C / R –conductivity = κ
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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 in very hot gas, electrons impede (scatter) photons and since n e α ρ then and hence recall that T C ~ M / R –and since fusion is very T C -sensitive then T C ~ constant R α M and hence –which is the M-L relation for massive (hot) stars! 2) Convection: Convecting star has blobs rising, giving up heat, then descending again Large T gradients convection –which occurs when: a)L generated in very small region b)and/or material is very opaque (as at low T)
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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 Stellar Structure from basic physics described so far detailed computer models of stars results stars have 2 basic structures: High Mass (>2 M O ) Low Mass (<1.5 M O ) T C > 18 x 10 6 K CNO cycle fusion rate α T 17 large L in small region core is convective outer layers hot not very opaque envelope stable, radiative T C < 18 x 10 6 K P-P chain fusion rate α T 4 small L in large region core is radiative outer layers cool and opaque envelope is convective
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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 Solar convection: e.g. outer 1/3 of Sun convects seen as surface granulation (taken by the Swedish Solar Tower on La Palma) granulation
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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 Stellar Evolution: 3 4 Core H-burning –H fuses in core –star on Main Sequence –as H fraction drops, T ↑ to compensate more energy generated L ↑ 4 5 6 Shell H-burning –at 4, H runs out in core –without fusion, core contracts and heats up until H re-ignites in shell around core –higher ρ, g H burns faster increase in L envelope expands as core contracts! –becomes Red Giant 6 7 He ignition –T in He core reaches 10 8 K –He ignites (the Helium Flash) –core expands, envelope contracts –star smaller, hotter, on Horizontal Branch Evolution of 1M O star in H-R Diagram
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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 8 9 End of the line –fusion dies away –White Dwarf (remnant hot core) emerges –cools (eventually) to a black dwarf (as all energy sources now exhausted) 7 8 Loss of envelope –fusion now unstable –huge mass loss in wind (red giant has R ~ 100 R O, so surface gravity g = G M / R 2 is ~ 10,000 times weaker than Sun easy to drive off matter) –core exposed Planetary Nebula Evolutionary sequence Evolutionary sequence is: –MS RG HB AGB PN WD 7 8 Shell He-burning –He runs out in core –core contracts until He ignites in shell –envelope expands Asymptotic Giant Branch star
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Lecture 15PHYS1005 – 2003/4 HST images of planetary nebulae:
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