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Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

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Astronomy 1020-H Spring_2015 Day-35 Stellar Astronomy
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Page 1: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Astronomy 1020-HSpring_2015

Day-35Stellar Astronomy

Page 2: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

To continue to burn hydrogen with all that helium in the way, the core of the star gets a little hotter, the surface

gets a little bigger and the star gets a little brighter .

Page 3: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Course Announcements• Dark night Alternative exercise is posted.• Reports are due Wed. Apr. 22• Solar Rotation Project due Mon. Apr. 27

• Final Exam (and Exam-4) is (are) scheduled for Thursday, May 7, 1:30-3:30pm.

• IF there is consensus, this could be moved to a different (more convenient) time.

Page 4: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

H can collect on the hot outer portions of the white dwarf.

Nuclear reactions can start, and the star gets much brighter temporarily nova.

For a few hours, it can be a half-million times more luminous than the Sun.

Page 5: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

The maximum mass for a white dwarf is 1.4 M, called the Chandrasekhar limit.

If material dumped on the white dwarf pushes it over this limit, it will collapse and explode.

Page 6: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

•Electron energy levels crowded together

almost continuous

•All low energy levels are full according to

the Pauli Exclusion Principle

•Only place for additional electrons to go is

in high energy levels which meansthey must move very fast…close tothe speed of light

•Adding more mass decreases the volume

•Temperature is same everywhere

Page 7: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.
Page 8: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

This is called a Type Ia supernova.

The explosion is briefly as luminous as 10 billion Suns.

Nothing of that star is left behind; the other star evolves on its own.

This process requires a binary system.

Page 9: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Concept Quiz—Stages

Which of the following is the correct order for the stages of evolution of the Sun?

A. main sequence, white dwarf, planetary nebula, red giant

B. main sequence, red giant, white dwarf, planetary nebula

C. main sequence, red giant, planetary nebula, white dwarf

D. main sequence, planetary nebula, red giant, white dwarf

Page 10: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Massive stars have more hydrogen to start with but they burn it at a

prodigious rate

The overall reaction is still

224 eHeH

There are 3 gamma ray photons instead of two as in the proton-proton cycle and it consumes

hydrogen much faster

Page 11: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Because energy flow in the core of the star is by radiation, the helium ash isn’t being stirred out.

Page 12: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

The central helium core is not fusing. It’s just being squeezed by gravity and added to by the hydrogen fusing above it

Page 13: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

A star’s escape velocity decreases once it spreads out:

Sun:

Sun as red giant:

MATH TOOLS 16.2MATH TOOLS 16.2

Page 14: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

What happens to planets when stars evolve? Planet migration may allow planets to

survive by moving outward, but some may move inward instead.

Planets have been found orbiting red giants and AGB stars.

As the Sun evolves, Earth’s present location will no longer be in the habitable zone.

Earth may move outward, inward, or stay where it is.

CONNECTIONSCONNECTIONS 16.116.1

Page 15: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.
Page 16: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Type Ia Supernovae over time have become very useful.

This could only happen after more scientists with greater technology analyzed their properties and realized connections.

PROCESS OF SCIENCEPROCESS OF SCIENCE

Page 17: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

High-mass stars live different, faster lives. On the main sequence, energy is generated

from the carbon-nitrogen-oxygen (CNO) cycle, with carbon as a catalyst:12C + 4 1H + 2 e = 12C + 4He + gamma rays + neutrinos.

Page 18: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

High-mass stars have convection to mix H in the core.

Increases the mass available for fusion.

Once H is exhausted from the core, the star leaves the main sequence and expands and cools.

Page 19: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Move right on the H-R diagram: supergiants.

Ignite He in a nondegenerate core, unlike low-mass stars.

With rising central temperatures, heavier elements (C, Ne, etc.) fuse, generating energy.

Page 20: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.
Page 21: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

The more massive the star, the heavier the elements that can fuse.

As temperature rises and core fuel is used up, heavier and heavier elements will fuse, up until iron.

The fusion shells build up like the layers of an onion.

Page 22: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

As high-mass stars expand and cool, they can pass through the instability strip on the HR diagram.

Here, the combination of temperature and luminosity results in the stars’ pulsation.

Page 23: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

These pulsating variable stars are extremely important for determining distances.

Specifically, they have a period-luminosity relationship.

Page 24: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Cepheid variables:• High-mass stars

becoming supergiants.• Periods from one to 100

days.• More luminous stars

have longer periods.

RR Lyrae variables:• Low-mass stars on the

horizontal branch.• Less luminous than

Cepheid variables.

Page 25: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Intermediate-mass stars have masses between 3 and 8 M.

Start off evolving as high-mass stars, but finish as low-mass stars do, as white dwarfs.

Very massive stars may shed some mass due to instabilities and go through a luminous blue variable (LBV) phase.

CONNECTIONS 17.1CONNECTIONS 17.1

Page 26: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Concept Quiz—Cepheid Variables

Why are Cepheid variable stars so important?

A. We can know their luminosities.

B. They produce pulsars.

C. They are about to explode as supernovae.

D. They generate most heavy elements.

Page 27: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.
Page 28: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Fusion of iron or more massive elements requires energy—the star cannot use them for fuel.

Once the star has an iron core, it cannot generate more energy.

Fusion stops, and the core collapses.

Page 29: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Things get so crowded the electrons are squeezed into the nucleus where they combine with protons to make neutrons in a process called Reverse Beta Decay

Page 30: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

Each stage of burning is progressively shorter.

Example: Si burning only lasts for a few days.

Why? Huge production of neutrinos, which carry away energy neutrino cooling.

The star cannot access the huge amount of energy produced in neutrinos.

Page 31: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.
Page 32: Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-35.

The net energy released by a nuclear reaction is the difference between the binding energy of the products and the binding energy of the reactants.

For the triple-alpha process:

For the fusion of iron, the binding energy of the products is less than that of the reactants, so the net energy is negative.

MATH TOOLS 17.1MATH TOOLS 17.1


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