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Chapter 2: Protostellar collapse and star formation

Chapter 2: Protostellar collapse and star formation. One of 3 branches of proton-proton chain. CNO cycle: C, N O atoms act as catalysts. T-dependence of pp chain and CNO cycle. Hydrostatic equilibrium: negative feedback loop. If core T drops, fusion rate drops, core contracts heats up.

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Chapter 2: Protostellar collapse and star formation

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  1. Chapter 2: Protostellar collapse and star formation

  2. One of 3 branches of proton-proton chain

  3. CNO cycle:C, N O atoms act as catalysts

  4. T-dependence of pp chain and CNO cycle

  5. Hydrostatic equilibrium: negative feedback loop • If core T drops, • fusion rate drops, • core contracts • heats up • If core heats up, • fusion rate rises • core expands • cools down

  6. Main sequence stars are modeled as concentric spherical shells in hydrostatic equilibrium Mass element dm Constant density  Inward force = outward force

  7. The Main Sequence L = A sT4

  8. Demographics of Stars • Observations of star clusters show that star formation makes many more low-mass stars than high-mass stars

  9. Giant molecular clouds are the sites of star formation GMC: Length scale ~ 10-100 pc T = 10 – 20 K Mass ~ 105 – 106Msun Clumps: Length scale ~ 2-5 pc T = 10 – 20 K Mass ~ 103 – 104Msun Cores: Length scale ~ 0.1 pc T = 10 K Mass ~ 1 Msun

  10. Clouds exhibit a clumpy structure

  11. Star forming regions in Orion

  12. What supports Cloud Cores from collapsing under their own gravity? • Thermal Energy (gas pressure) • Magnetic Fields • Rotation (angular momentum) • Turbulence

  13. Gravity vs. gas pressure • Gravity can create stars only if it can overcome the forces supporting a cloud • Molecules in a cloud emit photons: • cause emission spectra • carry energy away • cloud cools • prevents pressure buildup

  14. What happens when a cloud core collapses? Virial theorem: 2K + U = 0 If 2K > |U|, then • Force due to gas pressure dominates over gravity • Cloud is supported against collapse

  15. Gravitational potential energy Kinetic energy where Assume a spherical cloud with constant density

  16. where Using the equality and solving for M gives a special mass, MJ, called the Jeans Mass, after Sir James Jeans. In order for the cloud to collapse under its own gravity,

  17. You can also define a Jeans length, RJ Jeans Criterion When the mass of the cloud contained within radius Rc exceeds the Jeans mass, the cloud will spontaneously collapse:

  18. Figure from Jeff Hester & Steve Desch, ASU

  19. Figure from Jeff Hester & Steve Desch, ASU

  20. “protoplanetary disks”

  21. HH Objects

  22. Collapse slows before fusion begins: Protostar • Contraction --> higher density • --> even IR and radio photons can’t escape • --> Photons (=energy=heat) get trapped • --> core heats up (P ~ nT) • --> pressure increases • Protostars are still big --> luminous! • Gravitational potential energy --> light!

  23. What supports Cloud Cores from collapsing under their own gravity? • Thermal Energy (gas pressure) • Magnetic Fields • Rotation (angular momentum) • Turbulence

  24. Angular momentum problem • A protostellar core has to rid itself of 1000x Jsolar system • Core collapse produces a disk whose j increases with r • To redistribute (and/or lose) J takes >> orbital timescale • The disk is stable over ~106 years

  25. Homework for Wednesday Sept. 14 • Problem 2-5 from book • One paragraph on a possible topic for your semester project (for topics, check out the author’s blog or astrobites; then find a peer-reviewed paper on the subject from NASA ADS) • Estimate how the angular momentum is currently distributed in the solar system (sun & planets). Compare to the angular momentum of a uniform spherical gas cloud with ‘typical’ properties for a collapsing molecular cloud core.

  26. Protostellar evolution onto the main sequence

  27. Protostellar evolution for Different Masses • Sun took ~ 30 million years from protostar to main sequence • Higher-mass stars evolve faster • Lower-mass stars evolve more slowly

  28. 4000 K Hayashi Track Physical cause: at low T (< 4000 K), no mechanisms to transport energy out Such objects cannot maintain hydrostatic equilibrium They will rapidly contract and heat until closer to being in hydro. eq.

  29. Mass accretes onto the star via an accretion disk (Krumholtz et al 2009) Necessary to build stars > 8 Msun

  30. Phases of star formation

  31. Spectral energy distribution http://feps.as.arizona.edu/outreach/sed.html

  32. dust sublimes at ~2000 K p depends on grain properties, 0<p<2 Smaller grains = flatter T(R) =smaller p

  33. Comparing disk observations to models:

  34. Modeling SED’s with some simplifying assumptions: Dust grains are perfect blackbody emitters/absorbers Disk is optically thick Disk is geometrically thin Reality: Radiation absorption and emission depends on size, composition, shape, orientation (!) of grains (more so for optically thin disk) Optically thick = disk grains absorb only on the outside of disk, we only see emission from these grains Geometrically thick = disk self-gravity, etc

  35. continuous disk that extends out from the surface of the star to 100 AU

  36. same disk with an inner hole of 0.3 AU

  37. A gap = cleared by a planet?

  38. Class 0 Protostar: Earliest stage of collapse, no star visible, no disk visible Class I: bipolar outflow, jets ~100 km/s, still embedded in infalling material heated by star + disk Class II: “Classical T Tauri star” SED = star + disk, disk lifetime~ 106 yr Class III: PMS star w/ debris disk http://ssc.spitzer.caltech.edu/documents/compendium/galsci/

  39. T Tauri : the prototype protostar

  40. http://ssc.spitzer.caltech.edu/documents/compendium/galsci/

  41. http://vinkovic.org/Projects/Protoplanetary/

  42. http://vinkovic.org/Projects/Protoplanetary/

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