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A Star Is Born. Looking at the Interstellar Medium. The Stuff in Space. Material exists between the stars and planets “Building Blocks” for more stars and planets Interstellar Medium Composed of Gas and Dust. Interstellar Medium. Seen in telescopes
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A Star Is Born Looking at the Interstellar Medium
The Stuff in Space • Material exists between the stars and planets • “Building Blocks” for more stars and planets • Interstellar Medium • Composed of Gas and Dust
Interstellar Medium • Seen in telescopes • Large clouds of gas and dust are stellar “nurseries” • ISM is clumpy! • Obscures objects beyond it
Interstellar Gas • Gas is mostly individual atoms • Individual neutral atoms and ions • Molecules • Electrons • Hydrogen is main component • Very tenuous, doesn’t block light • Some parts cool, some parts hot
Interstellar Dust • More complex composition • 1% of ISM • Clumps of atoms and molecules • Much larger than gas particles so… • Can block light • Composition is not well known
Interstellar Dust • Light passes through dust cloud • Extinction-dimming of light • Longer Wavelengths pass through • Short Wavelengths get absorbed • Reddening- scattering of blue light • Red light makes it through • Changes star’s apparent color
Dust and Gas • Dust is believed to come from mass loss winds in stars (like solar wind) • Gas of wind can cool and solidify • Dust grains provide coagulation seeds for molecules
Evidence of Gas and Dust • Observed Nebulae (clouds) • Dust and Gas form different types of nebulae • 4 basic types • Emission (Bright) nebula • Dark nebula • Reflection nebula • Molecular Clouds
Emission Nebula • Example: Orion Nebula • Spectra has emission lines (hot gas) • Does not shine under it’s own light • Powered by hot stars • H II region (ionized hydrogen)
Emission Nebula • OB associations • Form H II region hot spot on molecular cloud • Drives new star formation • Reddish hue is from Hydrogen • H II regions are star “nurseries” • Very bright!
Emission Nebula Heart and Soul Nebulae Astronomy Picture of the Day
Emission Nebula The Eagle Nebula and a close up of a star forming region Astronomy Picture of the Day
Molecular Clouds • Composed mostly of H2 (hard to detect) • Use other molecules as tracers • 80 known ISM molecules • Many are organic molecules • Associated with H II regions • Majority of ISM is here
Molecular Clouds • 10’s of ly across (6 trillion miles= 1ly) • Cool clouds (Dark) • Occur in huge complexes • Contain enough gas to make millions of stars • 1000 + complexes in our Galaxy
Molecular Cloud Barnard 68 APOD
Molecular Cloud Horsehead Nebula Note: there are several types of nebulae in this panorama APOD
Dark Nebula • Example: Snake Nebula • Contain gas and dust • Dust blocks light • Cool (10’s K) • Larger than our Solar System • Also, dust lanes w/ H II regions
Dark Nebula Snake Nebula APOD
Reflection Nebula • Gas and Dust • Absorption line spectra (stars) • Doesn’t generate own light • Scatters blue light from starlight passing through • Nebula appears blue (like sky) • Example: Pleiades Nebula
Reflection Nebula Witch Head Nebula APOD
A Panorama in Orion Can you ID the different types of nebula here? APOD
Neutral Hydrogen • Presence was suspected • H II regions come from it • Not observed until 1951 • Need to observed from its own radiation • Low-energy Radio emissions from the gas itself
21-cm Radiation • From single electron orbiting nucleus • Not from excitation, from spin of electron • 2 possible configurations • Parallel • Anti-parallel • Lower energy one preferred • Spin flipping emits 21-cm photon
Coronal Interstellar Gas • Very hot gas • Highly Ionized • Very low density • Exists between clouds • Why?
Star Birth • Star’s life is a dance between gravity and radiation pressure • All stars have a similar origin • Cold, dark molecular clouds • Collapse to form stars
Cloud Collapse • Giant molecular cloud • Something to trigger collapse (shockwave) • Cloud begins to collapse under it’s own weight • Jean’s Instability • Cloud will begin to heat up as it collapses
Cloud Collapse • Heating causes outward pressure • Balances out gravity pushing inward • Collapse is “lumpy”, fragmentation • Pockets collapse faster (denser) • Centrally dense region is where star will eventually form
Cloud Collapse • Fragmentation occurs in several ways • Dozens of Massive Stars • Hundred or Thousands of Sun-like Stars • No evidence for single star formation • Single stars must escape after formation • Collapse can occur with or without rotation
Cloud Fragmentation • Sun sized star comes from • 2 solar mass fragment • 100 times radius of Solar System • Less than 100K • Fragmentation ceases as density of each fragment increases • Interior becomes opaque • Radiation is trapped
Fragmentation to Protostar • 10,000 + years passed • Central part 10,000K • Outer part cool • Dense, opaque central region=Protostar • Still contracting, material raining down on it
Protostar (Sun predecessor) • 1,000,000 years have passed • Not hot enough for P-P chain • Still about size of Mercury’s orbit • More luminous than Sun (bigger) • Surrounded by a dusty shroud • Vaporizes nearby dust
Protostar Protostar Dust Free Zone IR photon Outer Envelope of Gas and Dust
Protostar to Star • Protostar first appears on HR diagram • Protostar loses shroud • Vaporizes • Falls onto Star • Blown away by wind • Contracts, Luminosity , Temp • Hayashi track on HR Diagram • Violent Surface Wind (T Tauri Star)
T-Tauri Stars • Exhibit strong winds • Bipolar flows • Clear gas and dust away from young star so it is at last visible • Where the outrushing gas impacts stationary gas in the ISM a bright hot spot appears • Herbig-Haro object
T-Tauri Stars • Also appear to vary in brightness • Likely associated with star’s magnetic field, much like the active Sun • Have “star spots” like sun spots • Are still collapsing to final size • Larger in size and therefore brighter than they will be as main sequence stars
T-Tauri Star A false color image of the T-Tauri system Note jet APOD
HH object APOD Hubble Heritage
Pre-Main Sequence Star • 10,000,000 Years • Now a “True Star” • P-P Chain has begun • Larger and Cooler than Main Sequence Star • Still slowly contracting
At last, the Sun! • Contraction continues • Central Temp=15,000,000K • Outward pressure balances inward gravity • Hydrostatic Equilibrium (HSE) • Contraction Stops, Balance Reached • Main Sequence Star! • All main sequence stars are in HSE
Massive Stars • Steps occur faster • Collapse of Cloud occurs in similar way • Central part still collapses faster • Fragments are larger • No T Tauri phase • Chain Reaction from OB association • >100 M Gravity can’t hold together
Failed Stars • Some cloud fragments are too small • Don’t get hot enough • H-fusion never occurs • Warm due to collapsing • Brown dwarfs • Cooling objects • <0.08M (Jupiter)
Collapse with Rotation • Rotation during collapse leads to orbiting clumps around protostar • These clumps can attract more material via gravity and form planetismals • These could be a future solar system
Summary • All stars have a “cloudy” beginning • Different types of nebula • Stars collapse from clouds