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The Life Cycles of Stars RVCC Planetarium - Last updated 7/23/03
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Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star...
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How I Wonder What You Are... Stars have Different colors Which indicate different temperatures Different sizes Different masses The bigger it is, the hotter and the faster a star burns its life away.
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Stellar Evolution Stars begin their lives as clouds of gas and dust called Nebulas Clouds Contain: 70% H 28% He 2% Heavier Elements
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Stars start from Nebula Clouds
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Collapse to Protostar Nebula compresses Gravitational pull attracts more material. Temperature and pressure increases Nebula shrinks and begins to spin Spinning nebula begins to flatten into a disk ….A protostar is formed
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Protostars are forming in Orion Protostars are forming in the Orion Nebula
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Pressure builds inside the protostar over millions of years creating heat Temp increases to 10 million°C Nuclear fusion begins….A star is born!! Main Sequence stage of a star begins It is the longest stage in life of a star
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Nuclear Fusion ! At 15 million degrees Celsius in the center of the star, Hydrogen Atoms fuses into Helium. It takes 4 Hydrogen atoms to make one Helium atom Sun has 10 56 H atoms to burn which would last 8 billions year!
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The Beginning of the End: Red Giants After Hydrogen is exhausted in core: Core collapses, releasing energy to the outer layers Outer layers expand
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The Core of a Red Giant Giants are 10 times bigger than the sun Supergiants are 100 times bigger than the sun
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Expansion of the outer Layers
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Betelgeuse – A Red Giant Star
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Outer Layers are Expelled …
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… And a Planetary Nebula forms Planetary Nebulae After Helium exhausted, outer layers of star expelled
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Some Planetary Nebulae are Round As the dead core of the star cools, the nebula continues to expand, and dissipates into the surroundings.
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… and Bipolar
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Some look like an Hourglass …
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.. or a Cat’s Eye …
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… or even look like an Eskimo!
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White Dwarfs At Center of a Planetary Nebula … … sits a White Dwarfs White dwarfs shine for billions of years before they cool completely.
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The Hubble Space Telescope has detected white dwarf stars (circled) in globular clusters:
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White Dwarfs are Small and Heavy Size of the Earth with the Mass of the Sun “A ton per teaspoon”
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Nova is a white dwarf star that suddenly increases in brightness by several magnitudes. It fades very slowly. white dwarf star
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Fate of High Mass Stars After Helium is exhausted, core collapses again until it becomes hot enough to fuse Carbon into Magnesium or Oxygen. Through a combination of processes, successively heavier elements are formed and burned.
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The End of the Line for Massive Stars Massive stars burn a succession of elements. Iron is the most stable element and cannot be fused further.
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A Massive Star Explodes A Supernova is an exploding massive star
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Supernova 1987a
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What’s Left After the Supernova Neutron Star (If mass of core < 5) Under collapse, protons and electrons combine to form neutrons. Black Hole (If mass of core > 5) The force of contraction crushes the dense core of the star The gravity of a black hole is so great that not even light can escape from it.
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Supernova interaction This compression starts the collapse of gas and dust to form new stars. Supernovae compress gas and dust which lie between the stars.
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Which brings us back to … Sun-like StarsMassive Stars Stellar Recycling Nebula Protostar Low mass main sequence star Red Giant Planetary Nebula White Dwarf Nova High mass main sequence star Supergiant Supernova Neutron Star Black Hole
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