stars & galaxies © 2006, tesccc the content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use...

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Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development ONLY; and may not be used for other purposes, in whole or part, without the expressed written permission of their ESC-TESCCC coordinator for the region handling your subscription. TESCCC grants subscribers the right to edit this multimedia presentation for intra-district professional development ONLY.

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Page 1: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Stars & Galaxies

© 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development ONLY; and may not be used for other purposes, in whole or part, without the expressed written permission of their ESC-TESCCC coordinator for the region handling your subscription.

TESCCC grants subscribers the right to edit this multimedia presentation for intra-district professional development ONLY.

Page 2: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

A star is bornA star is made up of a large amount of

gas in a relatively small volume.

A nebula, on the other hand, is a large amount of gas and dust spread out in an immense volume.

All stars begin their lives as parts of nebulas.

Page 3: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

A star is born

Gravity can pull some of the gas and dust in a nebula together.

The contracting cloud is then called a protostar.

Proto means earliest stage of a star’s life.

A star is born when the contracting gas and dust become so hot that nuclear fusion starts.

Page 4: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Lifetimes of Stars Before they can tell how old a star is,

astronomers must determine its mass. How long a star lives depends on how much

mass it has. Stars with more mass have shorter lives than

those with less mass. Small stars use up their fuel more slowly than

large stars, so they have much longer lives. Generally, stars that have less mass than the

sun use their fuel slowly, and can live for about 200 billion years.

Medium- mass stars like the sun live for about 10 billion years.

Page 5: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Death of Stars

When a star begins to run out of fuel, the center of the star shrinks and the outer part of the star expands. The star becomes a red giant or supergiant.

All main sequence stars eventually become red giants or supergiants. However, what happens next depends on the mass of the stars.

When a star runs out of fuel, it becomes a white dwarf, a neutron star, or a black hole.

Page 6: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

White Dwarf

Small and medium stars become red giants and then white dwarfs.

Their outer layers expand to become red giants.

Eventually, the outer parts grow bigger still and drift out into space.

The blue white hot core is left behind causing a white dwarf.

When there is no more energy it becomes a black dwarf.

Page 7: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Neutron Stars A dying giant or supergiant star can suddenly explode.

Within hours, the star blazes millions of times brighter.

The explosion is called a supernova.

After a star explodes, some material from the star is left behind. This material may become part of a nebula.

This material may form a neutron star.

Neutron stars are even smaller and denser than white dwarfs.

Page 8: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Black Holes

The most massive stars- those having more than 40 times the mass of sun- become black holes when they die.

After this kind of star becomes a supernova, more than five times the mass of the sun may be left.

The gravity of this mass is so strong that the gas is pulled inward, packing it into a smaller and smaller space.

Page 9: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Lives of stars

Stars form in a nebula from collapsing clouds of interstellar gas and dust.

The rest of the life cycle depends on the mass of the star

Page 10: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Sun-like and Smaller Stars

Due to the mass of the star, fusion occurs (hydrogen is fused together releasing light and heat)

Stars the size of our sun can undergo fusion for 10 billion years.

After all of the helium undergoes fusion, it becomes a white dwarf.

As the fuel continues to dwindle the star eventually becomes a black dwarf.http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/B/blackdwarf.html

As the hydrogen runs out and helium undergoes fusion, the star turns into a red giant.

Page 11: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Huge Stars (1.5-3X the mass of the sun)

• The remnants of the explosion could become a neutron star

• Stars this size usually undergo fusion for less time than the sun-like stars.

• As a supergiant can suddenly explode into a supernova.

• As the hydrogen runs out and helium undergoes fusion, the star turns into a super giant.

Page 12: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Giant Stars (over 3X the mass of the sun)

A dying supergiant can explode into a supernova.

As the hydrogen runs out helium and undergoes fusion, the star turns into a supergiant.

Due to the immense mass, the material may be pulled by gravity inward, packing the gas so tightly a black hole is formed.

Page 13: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Quasars

Quasar is a distant galaxy with a black hole at its center.

As enormous amounts of gas revolve around such objects as a black hole, the gas heats up and shines brightly.

http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es2807/es2807page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization

Page 14: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Elliptical Galaxies

Not all galaxies have spiral arms.

Elliptical galaxies look like flattened balls.

These galaxies contain billions of stars but have little gas and dust between the stars.

Because of the lack of gas and dust, new stars cannot form in most elliptical galaxies and most contain only old stars.

Page 15: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Types of Galaxies

Some galaxies do not have regular shapes and are known as irregular galaxies.

Page 16: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

Spiral Galaxy

Our galaxy is a spiral galaxy.

http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es2809/es2809page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization

Page 17: Stars & Galaxies © 2006, TESCCC The content of this multimedia presentation is intended for use by TESCCC subscribers for intra-district professional development

The Universe

Universe is space and everything in it. http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/

es0401/es0401page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization – solar system animation http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/

es2808/es2808page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization – Milkyway at different scales