1 / 32

You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members.

You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members. Astronomers observe stars of different ages to infer how stars evolve. How do stars form?. A star is formed when a contracting cloud of gas and dust becomes so dense and hot that nuclear fusion begins.

Download Presentation

You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members. Astronomers observe stars of different ages to infer how stars evolve.

  2. How do stars form? A star is formed when a contracting cloud of gas and dust becomes so dense and hot that nuclear fusion begins. How Stars Form

  3. How Stars Form A nebula is a large cloud of gas and dust spread out over a large volume of space. • Some nebulas are glowing clouds lit from within by bright stars. • Other nebulas are cold, dark clouds that block the light from more-distant stars beyond the nebulas.

  4. How Stars Form Stars form in the densest regions of nebulae. Gravity pulls a nebula’s dust and gas into a denser cloud. As the nebula contracts, it heats up.

  5. How Stars Form A contracting cloud of gas and dust with enough mass to form a star is called a protostar. As a protostar contracts, its internal pressure and temperature continue to rise. Pressure from fusion supports the star against the tremendous inward pull of gravity.

  6. How Stars Form A group of bright young stars can be seen in the hollowed-out center of the Rosette Nebula.

  7. What determines how long a star remains on the main sequence? A star’s mass determines the star’s place on the main sequence and how long it will stay there. Adult Stars

  8. Adult Stars Stars spend about 90 percent of their lives on the main sequence. In all main-sequence stars, nuclear fusion converts hydrogen into helium at a stable rate. There is an equilibrium between the outward thermal pressure from fusion and gravity’s inward pull. The amount of gas and dust available when a star forms determines the mass of each young star.

  9. Adult Stars The most massive stars have large cores and therefore produce the most energy. High-mass stars become the bluest and brightest main-sequence stars. These blue stars are about 300,000 times brighter than the sun. Because blue stars burn so brightly, they use up their fuel relatively quickly and last only a few million years.

  10. Adult Stars Stars similar to the sun occupy the middle of the main sequence. A yellow star like the sun has a surface temperature of about 6000 K and will remain stable on the main sequence for about 10 billion years.

  11. Adult Stars Small nebulas produce small, cool stars that are long-lived. A star can have a mass as low as a tenth of the sun’s mass. The gravitational force in such low-mass stars is just strong enough to create a small core where nuclear fusion takes place. This lower energy production results in red stars, the coolest of all visible stars. A red star, with a surface temperature of about 3500 K, may stay on the main sequence for more than 100 billion years.

  12. What happens to a star when it runs out of fuel? The dwindling supply of fuel in a star’s core ultimately leads to the star’s death as a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole. The Death of a Star

  13. The Death of a Star When a star’s core begins to run out of hydrogen, gravity gains the upper hand over pressure, and the core starts to shrink. • The core temperature rises enough to cause the hydrogen in a shell outside the core to begin fusion. • The energy flowing outward increases, causing the outer regions of the star to expand. The expanding atmosphere moves farther from the hot core and cools to red. • The star becomes a red giant.

  14. The Death of a Star • The collapsing core grows hot enough for helium fusion to occur, producing carbon, oxygen, and heavier elements. • In helium fusion, the star stabilizes and its outer layers shrink and warm up. • The final stages of a star’s life depend on its mass.

  15. The Death of a Star The mass of a star determines the path of its evolution.

  16. The Death of a Star Low- and Medium-Mass Stars Low-mass and medium-mass stars, which can be as much as eight times as massive as the sun, eventually turn into white dwarfs. • Stars remain in the giant stage until their hydrogen and helium supplies dwindle and there are no other elements to fuse. • The energy coming from the star’s interior decreases. • With less outward pressure, the star collapses.

  17. The Death of a Star • The dying star is surrounded by a glowing cloud of gas, called a planetary nebula. • As the dying star blows off much of its mass, only its hot core remains. • This dense core is a white dwarf. A white dwarf is about the same size as Earth but has about the same mass as the sun. • White dwarfs don’t undergo fusion, but glow faintly from leftover thermal energy.

  18. The Death of a Star • Planetary nebulas, such as the Hourglass Nebula, are clouds of gas that surround a collapsing red giant.

  19. The Death of a Star • The Crab Nebula is the remnant of a supernova explosion that was observed on Earth in A.D. 1054. The supernova was so bright that people could see it in the daytime.

  20. The Death of a Star High-Mass Stars The life cycle of high-mass stars is very different from the life cycle of lower-mass stars. • As high-mass stars evolve from hydrogen fusion to the fusion of other elements, they grow into brilliant supergiants, which create new elements, the heaviest being iron. • A high-mass star dies quickly because it consumes fuel very rapidly.

  21. The Death of a Star • As fusion slows in a high-mass star, pressure decreases. • Gravity eventually overcomes the lower pressure, leading to a dramatic collapse of the star’s outer layers. • This collapse produces a supernova, an explosion so violent that the dying star becomes more brilliant than an entire galaxy.

  22. The Death of a Star Supernovas produce enough energy to create elements heavier than iron. • These elements, and lighter ones such as carbon and oxygen, are ejected into space by the explosion. • As a supernova spews material into space, its core continues to collapse.

  23. The Death of a Star If the remaining core of a supernova has a mass less than about three times the sun’s mass, it will become a neutron star, the dense remnant of a high-mass star that has exploded as a supernova. • In a neutron star, electrons and protons are crushed together by the star’s enormous gravity to form neutrons. • Neutron stars are much smaller and denser than white dwarfs.

  24. The Death of a Star A neutron star spins more and more rapidly as it contracts. Some neutron stars spin hundreds of turns per second! • Neutron stars emit steady beams of radiation in narrow cones. • A spinning neutron star that appears to give off strong pulses of radio waves is called a pulsar.

  25. The Death of a Star Pulsars emit steady beams of radiation that appear to pulse when the spinning beam sweeps across Earth.

  26. The Death of a Star If a star’s core after a supernova explosion is more than about three times the sun’s mass, its gravitational pull is very strong. The core collapses beyond the neutron-star stage to become a black hole. A black hole is an object whose surface gravity is so great that even electromagnetic waves, traveling at the speed of light, cannot escape from it.

  27. Assessment Questions • As a protostar contracts, what happens to its pressure and temperature? • They stay constant. • The temperature increases while the pressure stays constant. • They both decrease. • They both increase.

  28. Assessment Questions • As a protostar contracts, what happens to its pressure and temperature? • They stay constant. • The temperature increases while the pressure stays constant. • They both decrease. • They both increase.ANS: D

  29. Assessment Questions • Which type of main sequence star would be likely to remain in the main sequence for about 100 billion years? • red • yellow • white • blue

  30. Assessment Questions • Which type of main sequence star would be likely to remain in the main sequence for about 100 billion years? • red • yellow • white • blue ANS: A

  31. Assessment Questions • Based on its position on the H-R diagram, what will the sun become when it finally runs out of fuel? • nebula • supernova • neutron star • black dwarf

  32. Assessment Questions • Based on its position on the H-R diagram, what will the sun become when it finally runs out of fuel? • nebula • supernova • neutron star • black dwarfANS: D

More Related