370 likes | 526 Views
Our Sun’s Story …and that of heavy stars. mass of a star determines its core pressure and temperature: our sun’s low mass cooler core and slower fusion rate lower internal temperature, and external (yellow) smaller luminosity longer lifetime (10 B y)
E N D
Our Sun’s Story…and that of heavy stars mass of a star determines its core pressure and temperature: our sun’s low mass cooler core and slower fusion rate lower internal temperature, and external (yellow) smaller luminosity longer lifetime (10 B y) high mass stars (> 8 msun) have higher core temperature more luminous and higher external temperature (blue) more rapid fusion shorter-lived (30 M y)
High-Mass Stars > 8 MSun Intermediate-Mass Stars Low-Mass Stars < 2 MSun Brown Dwarfs famous Herztsprung- Russell diagram
sun is stable… as long as it has hydrogen in its core to fuse into helium
Thought Question What happens when a star no longer has enough hydrogen in its core to fuse to helium? i.e. after 10 B years A. Core cools off B. Core shrinks and heats up C. Core expands and heats up D. Helium fusion immediately begins
Thought Question What happens when a star can no longer fuse hydrogen to helium in its core? A. Core cools off B. Core shrinks and heats up C. Core expands and heats up D. Helium fusion immediately begins
Life Track after Main Sequence Observations of stars in clusters, all born at the same time, show that a star becomes larger, redder, and more luminous after fusing all the H in its core
as inert He core contracts, H in a shell around the He core begins burning luminosity increases 1,000 x too hot for life on Earth radius grows 100 x, out to Earth increased fusion rate in the H shell does not stop He core from contracting H shell burns for ~1 B years
luminosity of a sun? same as for any black body… L Area T4Stefan-Boltzman law even though T down 2, A up (100)2 for red giant,
Helium fusion does not begin until heated by collapse requires 100 MK since charge (+2)2 leads to 4 x greater repulsion than with 2 protons Fusion of 2 helium nuclei doesn’t work (8Be unstable), helium fusion must combine 3 He nuclei to make carbon
Thought Question What happens in a low-mass star when core temperature rises enough for helium fusion to begin? A. Helium fusion slowly starts up B. Hydrogen fusion stops C. Helium fusion (triple alpha) starts very sharply Hint: this is a strong reaction (no neutrinos) once the temperature is hot enough to overcome Coulomb barrier
Thought Question What happens in a low-mass star when core temperature rises enough for helium fusion to begin? A. Helium fusion slowly starts up B. Hydrogen fusion stops C. Helium fusion rises very sharply
Helium Flash Core temperature rises rapidly when helium fusion begins Helium fusion rate skyrockets until thermal pressure takes over and expands core again
Helium burning stars neither shrink nor grow, core He burns to C for 100 M years, then expand again in a second red giant phase
Thought Question What happens when the star’s core runs out of helium? A. The star explodes B. Carbon fusion begins C. The core cools off D. Helium fuses to C in a shell around a heavier carbon core
Thought Question What happens when the star’s core runs out of helium? A. The star explodes B. Carbon fusion begins C. The core cools off D. Helium fuses in a shell around the core
Double Shell Burning After core helium used up, He fuses into carbon in a shell around the inert carbon core H fuses to He in a shell around the fusing helium layer double-shell burning stage never reaches equilibrium—fusion rate periodically spikes upward in a series of thermal pulses With each spike, convection dredges carbon up from core and transports it to surface
Our Sun’s Dregs: a Planetary Nebula after few M years, double-shell burning ends in a pulse, ejecting H, He, C out into space a planetary nebula (but nothing to do with planets) white dwarf, carbon core left behind …two example pix from Hubble
for our sun, C is the end of the fusion trail fusion progresses no further in a low-mass star mass too small for gravity to collapse it further, and heat it up even more electron degeneracy pressure supports white dwarf against gravity (e-’s approach speed c if m > 1.4 msolar ) temperature never grows hot enough (400 M K) for fusion to heavier elements e.g. for He to fuse with C to make oxygen
How different are life stages of high-mass (e.g. 25 m๏) star? similar to those of low-mass stars, like our sun, but each is faster Hydrogen core fusion, ~ M years not pp, but much faster CNO cycle, higher luminosity making N and O as well as He becomes a red supergiant when core H exhausted Hydrogen shell burning around a He core Helium core fusion to carbon, lasting ~ 100,000 years Carbon burning (0.6 B ºK) for ~ 100 years
What are the life stages of a high-mass star? CNO Cycle High-mass fuse H to He at a higher rate using carbon catalyst, CNO cycle Greater core temperature heavy nuclei overcome greater Coulomb repulsion
How do high-mass stars make the elements necessary for life?
Helium Capture by O and Ne higher core temperatures from successive gravitational collapses gives helium the energy to thwart ever stronger Coulomb barriers (zZ) of heavier elements
Advanced Nuclear Burning • Core temperatures in stars with >8MSun allow fusion of elements as heavy as iron
Multiple Shell Burning • Advanced nuclear burning proceeds in a series of nested shells
Iron = dead end for fusion nuclear reactions of iron release no energy Fe has lowest mass per nucleon
signature of helium capture nucleosysthesis: highest abundances are elements with even numbers of protons
Iron builds up in core until degeneracy pressure can no longer resist gravity Core then suddenly collapses, creating supernova explosion
Energy and neutrons released in supernova explosion enable elements heavier than iron to form, including Au and U
What causes a supernova collapse? Core degeneracy pressure disappears electrons combine with protons, making neutrons and neutrinos kT + me + mp > mn kT + 0.5 + 938.3 > 939.6 MeV Ethermal = kT @ 10 BK = 1 MeV, k = Boltzman’s constant Neutrons collapse to the center, forming a much smaller (~10km~Boston) neutron star (me/mn ~ 1/2000) … then collapsing to a black hole if 12 msun
Supernova Remnant energy released by core collapse drives outer layers into space Crab Nebula the remnant of supernova of AD 1054 …and its neutron star
our picture of a pulsar (neutron star) during collapse… angular momentum conserved big spin up magnetic fields pinched very strong but in chaos of explosion, magnetic rotational axis beams of radiation escape along magnetic axis “lighthouse” beam sweeps periodically past earth… spinning so fast it can only be from a compact source, r ~ 10 km
Supernova 1987A closest supernova in the last four centuries