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The Life History of Stars – Young Stars. The Importance of Mass. The entire history of a star depends on its mass and almost nothing else The more mass a star has, the faster it does everything The stages of a star differ based on what is happening in the core of the star
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The Life History of Stars – Young Stars The Importance of Mass • The entire history of a star depends on its mass and almost nothing else • The more mass a star has, the faster it does everything • The stages of a star differ based on what is happening in the core of the star • The properties of a star vary wildly as it passes through different stages • Qualitatively, stars have similar histories, with one big split: • Low mass stars (< 8 MSun) have quiet deaths • High mass stars (> 8 MSun) go out with a bang
Low Mass Stars (< 8 MSun) - Outline Mommy Fetus Adult Old Woman Cancer Corpse • Molecular Cloud • Protostar • Main Sequence • Red Giant • Core Helium-Burning • Double Shell-Burning • Planetary nebula • White Dwarf • Which stage takes the largest amount of time? • Main Sequence • B) Red Giant • C) Core Helium-Burning • D) Double Shell-Burning • E) Planetary Nebula • The more massive the star, the faster it does everything • From Main Sequence to Planetary Nebula, each stage goes faster than the previous
Molecular Clouds • Molecular Cloud • Protostar • Main Sequence • Red Giant • Core Helium-Burning • Double Shell-Burning • Planetary Nebula • White Dwarf • Huge, cool, relatively dense clouds of gas and dust • Gravity causes them to begin to contract • Clumps begin forming – destined to become stellar systems • Composition: • 75% hydrogen (H2), 23% helium (He), < 2% other
Formation of Protostars • Molecular Cloud • Protostar • Main Sequence • Red Giant • Core Helium-Burning • Double Shell-Burning • Planetary Nebula • White Dwarf • Cloud fragments to form multiple stars • Stars usually form in clusters • Often, two or more stars remain in orbit • The stars are a balance of pressure vs. gravity • Heat leaks out – they cool off • Reduced pressure – gravity wins – it contracts
Negative Heat Capacity • What happen as heat leaks out • They cool off • By P = knT, they have less pressure • Gravity defeats pressure • They contract • Energy is converted • Gravitational Energy Kinetic energy • Kinetic energy Heat • Net effect: When you remove heat, a star gets: • Smaller • Hotter (!)
H-R diagram: Protostar • Molecular Cloud • Protostar • Main Sequence • Red Giant • Core Helium-Burning • Double Shell-Burning • Planetary Nebula • White Dwarf Double Shell-Burning Core Helium-Burning
Stellar Winds • Stars are still embedded in molecular clouds of gas and dust • Stars begin blowing out gas - winds • Wind blows away the dust – we see star
A Star is Born • Molecular Cloud • Protostar • Main Sequence • Red Giant • Core Helium-Burning • Double Shell-Burning • Planetary Nebula • White Dwarf • The interior of the star is getting hotter and hotter • At 10 million K, fusion starts • This creates energy • It replaces the lost heat – the star stops getting dimmer • The surface continues shrinking for a while • Left and a little up on the H-R diagram • It becomes a Main Sequence star
H-R diagram: To the Main Sequence • Molecular Cloud • Protostar • Main Sequence • Red Giant • Core Helium-Burning • Double Shell-Burning • Planetary Nebula • White Dwarf Double Shell-Burning Core Helium-Burning
Mass Distribution of Stars • Stars Range from about 0.08 – 150 Msun • Lighter than 0.08 – they don’t get hot enough for fusion • Heavier than 150 – they burn so furiously they blow off their outer layers • Light stars much more common than heavy ones • Objects lighter than 0.08 MSun are calledbrowndwarfs Brown Dwarf Small Star
High Mass Stars Eta Carinae About 150 MSun HDE 269810 Peony Nebula Star
Life on the Main Sequence • The star is now in a steady state – it is “burning” hydrogen 4H + 2e- He + 2 + energy • It burns at exactly the right rate to replace the energy lost • For the Sun, there is enough fuel in the central part to keep it burning steadily for 10 billion years • All stars are in a balance of pressure vs. gravity • To compensate for larger masses, they have to be bigger • They have lower density, which lets heat escape faster • They have to burn fuel faster to compensate • To burn faster, they have to be a little hotter
Structure of Main Sequence Stars • All burnhydrogen tohelium at theircores • Solar mass: Convection on the outside • High mass: Convection on the inside • Low mass: Convection everywhere
Announcements DateRead Today Sec. 12.1, 12.2 Thursday Sec. 12.3 Friday Sec. 13.2, 11.3, 13.1, 13.3 MondayStudy for Test • Lab Tonight • Out-4, In-8 6/15
Evolution on the Main Sequence 4H + 2e- He + 2 + energy • Number of particles decreased: • The neutrinos leave • 6 particles 1 particle • Reduced pressure: P = knT • Core shrinks slightly • Temperature rises slightly • Fuel burns a little faster • Star gets a little more luminous • Up slightly on H-R diagram
Evolution on the Main Sequence • Molecular Cloud • Protostar • Main Sequence • Red Giant • Core Helium-Burning • Double Shell-Burning • Planetary Nebula • White Dwarf Double Shell-Burning Core Helium-Burning
Lifetime on the Main Sequence Age of Universe • The amount of fuel in a star is proportional to the mass • How fast they burn fuel is proportional to the Luminosity • Massive stars burn fuel much faster ClMlife O5 60 360 ky B0 18 10 My A0 3 400 My A5 2 1.1 Gy G2 1 10 Gy G5 0.9 15 Gy M7 0.2 500 Gy Which stars run out of fuel first? A) Massive stars B) Light stars C) Same time D) Insufficient information • Stars lighter than Sun still main sequence