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H and He Burning Prof John Lattanzio Centre for Stellar and Planetary Astrophysics School of Mathematical Sciences
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Reaction Rates Lets look at reactions involving two different kinds of particles, i and j (or and ) Suppose there are two of each in a box There are thus four possible reaction pairs
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Rate formula In general each i can react with all the other j particles so the number of reaction pairs is n i n j For identical particles this becomes n i n j-1 except that it counts each pair twice; so the number of pairs is really n i (n i -1)/2 in this case Now in general n i is ~ N A ~ 10 23 –So n i -1 = n i to high accuracy!
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New rate formula So for identical particles the number of pairs is n i 2 /2 to very high accuracy But for different particles its n i n j We can combine these into one formula by using the Kronecker delta ij – ij = 1 if i = j – ij = 0 otherwise r ij = n i n j ij 1 + ij
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H Burning There are two main ways of burning H –Proton-Proton chains (pp) –CNO cycle(s) PP chains are the simplest We deal with those first
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The Proton-Proton Reaction The first step is adding two protons 1 H + 2 D + + + + e Deuterium = heavy H Z=1 N=1 Nucleus = d = deuteron Hydrogen Z=1 N=0 Nucleus = p = proton Positron or anti-electronNeutrino (electron) One proton becomes a neutron with a positron for charge conservation and a neutrino for energy conservation The key is really: p n + + + e
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Next Step: H + D The next step is adding H and D 1 H + 2 D 3 He + Deuterium = heavy H Z=1 N=1 Nucleus = d = deuteron Hydrogen Z=1 N=0 Nucleus = p = proton Helium-3 Z=2 N=1 Gamma ray (photon) No changes of particles here…2p + 1n on each side
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Last Step: 3 He + H? You may think that the next step is to ad a proton to 3 He to get 4 He, the most common isotope of helium But it turns out that the nuclear structure is such that this is highly unlikley! You cannot tell this from pure thought!
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Last Step: 3 He + 3 He The last step is adding two 3 He together 3 He + 4 He + pp Helium-3 Z=2 N=1 Returning 2 protons No changes of particles here…4p + 2n on each side Helium-4 Z=2 N=2
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Overall PPI Chain 1 H + 1 H 2 D + + + e 1 H + 2 D 3 He + 3 He + 3 He 4 He + p
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What are the rates? 1 H + 1 H 2 D + + + e 1 H + 2 D 3 He + 3 He + 3 He 4 He + p r pp = n p 2 pp /2 r pd =n p n d pd r 33 = n 3 2 33 /2 r ij = n i n j ij 1 + ij
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What are the DEs for the abundances? 1 H + 1 H 2 D + + + e 1 H + 2 D 3 He + 3 He + 3 He 4 He + p r pp = n p 2 pp /2 r pd =n p n d pd r 33 = n 3 2 33 /2 d n p dt = production rate – destruction rate = 2 r 33 – 2 r pp – r pd
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For Deuterium 1 H + 1 H 2 D + + + e 1 H + 2 D 3 He + 3 He + 3 He 4 He + p r pp = n p 2 pp /2 r pd =n p n d pd r 33 = n 3 2 33 /2 d n d dt = production rate – destruction rate = r pp – r pd
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For 3 He 1 H + 1 H 2 D + + + e 1 H + 2 D 3 He + 3 He + 3 He 4 He + p r pp = n p 2 pp /2 r pd =n p n d pd r 33 = n 3 2 33 /2 d n 3 dt = production rate – destruction rate = r pd – 2 r 33
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For 4 He 1 H + 1 H 2 D + + + e 1 H + 2 D 3 He + 3 He + 3 He 4 He + p r pp = n p 2 pp /2 r pd =n p n d pd r 33 = n 3 2 33 /2 d n 4 dt = production rate – destruction rate = r 33
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Summary of rates and DEs 1 H + 1 H 2 D + + + e 1 H + 2 D 3 He + 3 He + 3 He 4 He + p r pp = n p 2 pp /2 r pd =n p n d pd r 33 = n 3 2 33 /2 d n p dt = 2 r 33 – 2 r pp – r pd d n d dt = r pp – r pd d n 3 dt = r pd – 2 r 33 d n 4 dt = r 33
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Deuterium in equilibrium Note that the 2 D equation is self-correcting If n d is low, the first term dominates –n d increases If n d is high the second term dominates –n d decreases d n d dt = r pp – r pd = n p 2 pp /2 – n p n d pd
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Deuterium in equilibrium d n d dt = r pp – r pd = 0 n p 2 pp /2 = n p n d pd npnp ndnd ( ) eqm = pp pd ( )
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3 He in equilibrium Note that the 3 He equation is also self-correcting If n 3 is low, the first term dominates –n 3 increases If n 3 is high the second term dominates –n 3 decreases d n 3 dt = r pd – 2r 33 = n p n d pd – n 3 2 33
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PPI in equilibrium Suppose the deuterium and 3 He are in eqm d n p dt = 2 r 33 – 2 r pp – r pd d n d dt = r pp – r pd =0 d n 3 dt = r pd – 2 r 33 =0 d n 4 dt = r 33 = r pd /2 = r pp /2 = - ¼ d n p dt
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PPI Energy Generation One can show (but not quickly!) that the energy generation rate for PPI is X 2 T 6 4 where T 6 = T / 10 6 K
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More on PPI: 2 D DE for deuterium
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2 D equation Now define
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2 D equation p (D) ~ secs or mins! Can almost always assume the 2 D is in equilibrium Can remove 2 D from the equations
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2 D equilibrium: T = 10 million K H burns into He 4 in ~10 11 years D 2 destroyed in 10 -5 y Or 300 secs Or 5 mins
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2 D equilibrium: T = 20 million K D 2 destroyed in 10 -6.5 y Or 10 secs H burns into He 4 in ~ 10 10 years
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3 He equation Assume 2 D in equilibrium: r pp = r pd ( 3 He/H) e ~ 10 -2 to 10 -10 low T high T
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3 He equilibrium: T = 10 million K He 3 increases due to D 2 destruction Reaches eqm later H burns into He 4 in ~10 11 years 3 He eqm ~ 10 -3.5
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3 He equilibrium: T = 20 million K He 3 increases due to D 2 destruction Reaches eqm later H burns into He 4 in ~10 10 years 3 He eqm ~ 10 -5.2
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Exercise
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PP Chains at various T As T rises: H burns more quickly D 2 eqm happens earlier He 3 eqm happens earlier He 3 eqm value decreases
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PP Chains (I, II and III) PPI Chain But once there is some 4 He… And 7 Be can Capture a proton Or capture an electron Makes PPII and PPIII chains
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PP Chains Fate of 3 He determines PPI or PPII and III Fate of 7 Be determines PPII and III
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DEs for the PP chains
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Equations for PP Chains Some simplifications! – 2 D in equilibrium (seconds) – 7 Be and 7 Li in equilibrium in a few years – few thousand years Further details –This enables some simplifications At low T we get PPI At higher T we get PPII and PPIII
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7 Li and 7 Be: T = 10 million K H burns into He 4 in ~10 11 years Li and Be reach eqm values in ~10 6 years
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7 Li and 7 Be: T = 20 million K H burns into He 4 in ~10 10 years Li and Be reach eqm values in ~10 4 years
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PP Chains PPI PPII PPIII
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PP Chains
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Chart of the Nuclides: The “big boys/girls” periodic table Z = number of protons N = number of neutrons
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PP Chains PPI PPII PPIII
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Notation Time to become real nuclear physicists! We have been writing a+X Y+b From now on we will write X( a,b )Y the heavy species X( a,b )Y lighter particles
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Examples 2 D +p 3 He + becomes 2 D(p, ) 3 He 3 He + 3 He 4 He + becomes 3 He( 3 He, p) 4 He 1 H + 1 H 2 D + becomes 1 H(p, ) 2 D 3 He + 4 He 7 Be + becomes 3 He( , ) 7 Be 12 C +p 13 N + becomes 12 C(p, ) 13 N 12 C + 4 He 16 O + becomes 12 C( , ) 16 O
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Decays Decays are different 8 B 8 Be + + becomes 8 B( ) 8 Be NB No comma! 13 N 13 C + + becomes 13 N( ) 13 C
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CN Cycle At slightly higher temperatures the dominant H burning reactions are the CN cycle 12 C + p 13 N + 13 N 13 C + 13 C + p 14 N + 14 N + p 15 O + 15 O 15 N + 15 N + p 12 C +
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CN Cycle Add up both sides: 12 C + p 13 N + 13 N 13 C + 13 C + p 14 N + 14 N + p 15 O + 15 O 15 N + 15 N + p 12 C + 4p + energy
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CN Cycle Temperature sensitivity? –It starts at about 15-20 million K –PP starts at 5-10 million K Approximate rate formula X H X CN T 6 20 X 2 T 6 4 for PP
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The CN cycle But sometimes we get: 15 N(p, ) 16 O
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ON cycle Once there is some 16 O present… (or 16 O may be present initially in any case…)
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The CNO bi-cycle
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At high T, say > 100 million we must add more reactions! The elements that suffer decay might capture a proton at high T… The CNO bi-cycle
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CNO cycles + decays are very quick t 1/2 ( 13 N)=10 min t 1/2 ( 15 O)=122 secs t 1/2 ( 17 F)= 65 secs Assume instantaneous for 13 N, 15 O and 17 F Accurate after a few minutes! Simplifications…?
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Separation: CN and ON cycles Lets ignore branching –Take branching ratio r = 1 –Its really about 0.999, depending on T Thus we get a CN cycle (no O) So go around CN 999 times per O produced Clearly the CN cycle part is ~10 4 times faster! We’ll later deal with the ON part
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CN Cycle This is basically the original cycle with the decays assumed instantaneous
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CN Cycle This can be written as an eigenvalue problem 0+ +0
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CN Cycle = 1/( N) is a function of T and Assume T and constant: solution is When cycle in equilibrium there is no time-dependence So one of the eigenvalues must be zero! Its eigenvector must contain equilibrium abundances! The other eigenvalues must be negative… … t these terms must 0 so we are left with the eq m value
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CN cycle solution Equilibrium abundances Terms sum to zero…
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An example Take T = 25 million K and X=25 14 N+p is slowest… T > 10 4 y gives eqm Conservation of nuclei
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CN Cycle at 20 million K decay species negligible 12 C down 13 C up 14 N produced
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Executive Summary of CN Cycle CN cycle burns H into He After ~ 10 4 years we have equilibrium As a by-product – 12 C/ 13 C ~ 4 –~98% of C and N ends up as 14 N
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CN Cycle at various T
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ON Cycle We saw that the CN cycle goes around ~10000 times for each nucleus that “leaks” into 16 O So before there is much cycling in the second cycle we may expect that the first has already come to equilibrium Assume CN cycle in equilibrium Look at remaining reactions
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ON Cycle Assume CN cycle in equilibrium Assume all C has become 14 N Assume 15 N decays instantly Look at remaining reactions 3’ 5’ and 6’
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CN and ON symmetry +0 0+ +0 0+
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CN ON cycle matrices
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ON cycle at 20 million K 16 O down 14 N up CN cycle in eqm
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ON cycle at 20 million K 17 O produced 18 O destroyed Constant ratio of 17 O/ 16 O ~ 0.1 18 O/ 16 O ~ 10 -4
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ON Cycle results Again, everything ends up as 14 N – 14 N + p is slow reaction… ON cycle requires higher T than CN ON cycle takes longer to reach equilibrium –10 7 -10 8 years… Approx for CNO cycles:
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ON cycle at 20 million K CN eqm: 10 4 y ON eqm: 10 8 y
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Summary of H burning Low T: pp Higher T: CN and then ON cycles
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CN cycle
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CNO cycles
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CNO cycles – including high T
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More H burning: Ne-Na & Mg-Al chains CNO CyclesNe-Na ChainMg-Al Chain Leakage
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More H burning: Ne-Na cycle
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Relatively complete network
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Helium Burning After H burning the next step is He burning You may expect But in fact the Be decays into two 4He almost instantly… But if a third He collides with the Be before it decays…. 4 He + 4 He 8 Be
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Helium Burning: Triple Alpha 4 He + 4 He + 4 He 12 C + Y 2 T 8 41 NB Its T/10 8 K Helium burning takes about 100 million K to start…
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Complete Helium Burning But there is another important reaction… 3 4 He 12 C + 12 C + 4 He 16 O + So once some 12 C exists it can burn into 16 O XiXi time Helium Carbon Oxygen
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Solar abundances The aim of nucleosynthesis is to explain all of this graph!
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X, Y and Z Astronomers are pretty lazy people –X = mass fraction of H –Y = mass fraction of He –Z = 1=X-Y = mass fraction of “metals”
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Periodic Table
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Enough for today!
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