astrophysics i: the stellar lifecycle kathy cooksey

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Page 1: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

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Astrophysics I:Astrophysics I:The Stellar LifecycleThe Stellar Lifecycle

Kathy Cooksey

Page 2: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

How to Make a Star• Collapse interstellar clouds

Page 3: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

•Visible and IR image of the hot protostars in Orion Nebula.

Page 4: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

How to Make Systems

• Cloud around protostar spins faster

• Flattens to a disk– Think pizza dough

Page 5: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Protostars and Disks• Dust and gas

condense onto dust grains

• Small clumps grow bigger

• Bigger clumps have more mass and attract more matter

• Planetesimals become building blocks of planets Orion Nebula – Copyright O’Dell and Wong

Page 6: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Now what?• Mass of the star

determines rest of its life!

• More massive star more pressure in core

• More pressure more fusion

• More fusion:– More energy produced

– Hotter

– Shorter life span

Page 7: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Stellar Stellar EvolutionEvolution

The Life of a Star(like our Sun)

(which does not move in a circle as it evolves

Artist’s rendition)

Page 8: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

The Main Sequence• Balance between:

– Force of gravity pulling in

– Pressure from the heat of fusion pushing out

• Stars on main sequence burn hydrogen in their core to produce heat

• Longest phase of a star’s life

Page 9: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

What then?

• Gravity-pressure balance disturbed when hydrogen in core depleted

• Big change in structure and appearance of the star• “THE END” depends on star’s mass• Two cases:

– Low-mass (< 8 mass of Sun)

– High-mass (> 8 mass of Sun)

Page 10: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Red Giants

After hydrogen exhausted in core: • Core collapses, releasing energy to

outer layers• Outer layers expand• Increasing temperature and pressure

in core helium fuses

Page 11: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

The End for Low Mass Stars

• Core is contracting and heating.– Surface is cooling and expanding.

• Will it finally become hot enough in core for Carbon to fuse?– For the Sun: No.

• Gravity keeps contracting the core: 1000 kg/cm3!• What stops it?

– Electron degeneracy pressure!

Page 12: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Electron Degeneracy

Pressure from motion of atoms

Page 13: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Electron Degeneracy

Pressure from electron shells

Page 14: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Where are we now?

• Core dead – nothing happening.• Shells – burning H and He, but soon stop too.• Outside atmosphere of star still cooling and

expanding.• …and expanding• …and expanding• Force of radiation from burning shells blows

atmosphere away.

Page 15: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

M57 – Ring Nebula

Page 16: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

White Dwarfs

• Leftover once atmosphere blows away

• Exposed electron degenerate carbon core

• Size of Earth• No more fusion• Glow by their heat alone• Eventually cool and fade

away black dwarf

Page 17: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

High-Mass Stars• H and He burned in core• Core collapses hot enough

to fuse heavier elements (C, N, O …)

• Iron is most stable element and cannot be fused further– Instead of releasing energy,

it uses energy

Page 18: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

End for High Mass Stars• Fuel runs out• Core collapses and rebounds• Supernova!• Matter thrown back into the

interstellar medium• Matter rushing outwards,

fuses with matterrushing inwards

• Every element heavier than iron is made in instant of supernova!

Page 19: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

We are stardust!

Page 20: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

About the core…

Page 21: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

First Stop: Electron Degeneracy

Page 22: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Last Stop: Neutron Degeneracy

Page 23: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Otherwise…

Page 24: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

M1 – Crab Nebula – copyright VLT

Page 25: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

NGC 4526 – 6 Million parsecs away

Page 26: Astrophysics I: The Stellar Lifecycle Kathy Cooksey

Stellar Lifecycle Summary

Low-mass Stars

• Like Sun

• Long lived (measure in billion years)

• Fuse to mostly helium

• Planetary nebula and white dwarf end state

• Most common

High-mass Stars

• 8 more massive

• Short lived (measure in million years)

• More fusion (C, N, O …)

• Supernova and neutron star or black hole end

• Makes most important elements