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The Reactions The Main Sequence – The P – P Chain. 1 H + 1 H 2 H + proton + neutrino. 2 H + 1 H 3 He + energy. 3 He + 3 He 4 H + 1 H + 1 H + energy. The net result -. 4 ( 1 H ) 4 He + energy + 2 neutrinos. The Reactions The Main Sequence – The CNO Cycle
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The Reactions The Main Sequence – The P – P Chain 1H + 1H 2H + proton + neutrino 2H + 1H 3He + energy 3He + 3He 4H + 1H + 1H + energy The net result - 4 ( 1H ) 4He + energy + 2 neutrinos
The Reactions The Main Sequence – The CNO Cycle M > 1.2 M and T > 17 million K More massive stars burn hydrogen via a catalytic reaction called The CNO CYCLE. Because the initial step in the CNO Cycle requires a Carbon nucleus (6 p+) to react with a proton it requires higher temperatures and is much more temperature sensitive than the P-P Chain (The energy produced is proportional to T20 for the CNO cycle vsT4 for the P-P Chain). Stars of mass greater than about 1.2 M with core temperatures, Tcore > 17 million K, produce most of their energy by the CNO cycle. 12C + 1H 13N 13N 13C (unstable radioactive decay) 15N + 1H 12C + 42He 13C + 1H 14N 15O 15N (unstable radioactive decay) 14N + 1H 15O
The Reactions The P – P Chain vs The CNO Cycle Factors Controlling the Fusion Rates * There must be C, N, or O present for the CNO cycle to occur, so it can only happen for stars where this is true. However, only a very small amount is required, so this condition is often fulfilled. * The reactions have very different temperature dependences, as illustrated in the figure.
The Reactions The P – P Chain vs The CNO Cycle At lower temperatures the PP chain dominates, but with rising temperatures there is a sudden transition to dominance by the CNO cycle, which has an energy production rate that varies strongly with temperature. This is why the CNO cycle is more important for heavier stars: their interior temperatures are higher, thus favoring the CNO cycle.
The Reactions The Triple Alpha Process T > 100 million K 3 ( 4He ) 12C
Advanced Nuclear Reaction Stages Following the Triple-alpha process there are a variety of reactions which may occur depending on the mass of the star. Three general principles influence the roles that these nuclear burning stages may play: * Successive nuclear burning stages, involving more massive nuclei with higher charges, will require increasingly high temperatures to overcome the increased electrical repulsion. * The amount of energy released by each successive reaction stage decreases so that later nuclear burning stages become shorter and shorter. * Once fusion reactions have produced an iron core, further fusion reactions no longer produce energy, but absorb energy from the stellar core. As we shall see this may have a catastrophic effect on the star as it nears the end of its life.
Advanced Nuclear Reaction Stages 12C + 4He 16O 16O + 4He 20Ne
Advanced Nuclear Reaction Stages T > 500 million K 12C + 12C 24Mg
Advanced Nuclear Reaction Stages T > 1 billion K 16O + 16O 32S
Advanced Nuclear Reaction Stages T > 3 billion K Silicon burning occurs through a series of reactions that produce nuclei near the "iron-peak", that is near 56Fe on the Periodic Table, the element with the most strongly bound nucleus.