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The life cycle of Stars. Where do stars form. Stars form in clouds of gas (a nebula) These are called diffuse nebula or star forming nebula. A single nebula can form hundreds or even thousands of stars Let’s see what they look like!!. M8 – The Lagoon Nebula. M16 – The Eagle Nebula.
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Where do stars form • Stars form in clouds of gas (a nebula) • These are called diffuse nebula or star forming nebula. • A single nebula can form hundreds or even thousands of stars • Let’s see what they look like!!
M8 – The Lagoon Nebula M16 – The Eagle Nebula Star Forming Regions
What happens when stars start forming in nebulas • Stars often form in groups called “clusters” • There are two types of clusters 1. open clusters usually have only a few hundred stars and are found inside galaxies 2. globular clusters have hundreds of thousands of stars
Open cluster - M45 The Pleiades – The Seven Sisters
What happens at the end of the stars life? • Average stars produce planetary nebula • When the core of the star starts a fusion reaction with the helium ash, the temperature increases dramatically causing the outer layers to be puffed off. • Big stars produce supernova explosions • When larger stars start to produce iron at their core, it marks the beginning of the end. The core collapses and then rebounds in a massive explosion called a supernova!
A glimpse at our future M57 – The ring Nebula M27 – The dumbell Nebula
More Planetaries M97 - The owl nebula NGC 7293 – The Helix Nebula
What about supernovas This star is in the large Magellanic cloud and became visible to the naked eye in 1987 but it actually exploded about 180,000 years ago
How do we anything about stars? • From their spectrum • We know the composition of the atmosphere • We know how fast the object is moving • We know the strength of its magnetic field
How do we know the temperature • By looking at the color • RED = 2000 degrees • Yellow = 6000 degrees • Blue = up to 100,000 degrees
How did we figure the life cycle of stars? • We use an HR diagram • The HR diagram compares temperature to brightness