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Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars....

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Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) ution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. y nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars. a explosions: two types due to “carbon detonation” of an accreting white dwarf in a due to “core collapse” in a high-mass star. es of supernovae leave behind remnants. from clusters confirms our theories of stellar evolution. objects: neutron stars, pulsars, quark stars, and black hole
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Page 1: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b)

The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars.

Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Supernova explosions: two types

Type I: due to “carbon detonation” of an accreting white dwarf in a binary.

Type II: due to “core collapse” in a high-mass star.

Both types of supernovae leave behind remnants.

Evidence from clusters confirms our theories of stellar evolution.

Compact objects: neutron stars, pulsars, quark stars, and black holes.

Page 2: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

High-Mass stellar evolutionary tracks are quite different from the low-mass

stellar evolution tracks. Notice that

the core can heat up so fast that the

envelope of the star tends to lag behind. Carbon fusion can

start before the red giant phase.

Page 3: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Heavy Element Fusion- shells like an onion

Page 4: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Supernova 1987A seen near nebula 30 Doradus

Page 5: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 6: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

1994

Page 7: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

SN2005cs in M51(Whirlpool galaxy) discovered June 27, 2005

Page 8: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

SN2005cs in M51(Whirlpool galaxy) discovered June 27, 2005

Page 9: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 10: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Supernovae in our galaxy have been infrequent.

• Historical supernovae in the Milky Way (none observed by telescope !!!!): http://www.seds.org/messier/more/mw_sn.html

• Recent supernovae by date: http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/iau/lists/RecentSupernovae.html

• All supernovae since 1885: http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/iau/lists/Supernovae.html

• Links for supernovae on the web: http://rsd-www.nrl.navy.mil/7212/montes/sne.html

• Latest supernovae (by current brightness !): http://www.rochesterastronomy.org/supernova.html

• Supernova SN2005cs in M51 (Whirlpool galaxy): http://www.rochesterastronomy.org/sn2005/sn2005cs.html also see: http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap050719.html

Page 11: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Supernova Light Curves fall into two types

Page 12: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Two Types of Supernova (see following slides)

Page 13: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Type I Supernova is a “carbon detonation” and involves a white dwarf which completely explodes.

As material accretes on the white dwarf from a binary companion, it’s mass finally reaches a critical limit, and the entire carbon core fuses

to heavier elements, all at once.

Page 14: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

A moreelaboratetheory of a Type Iasupernovamight show how someplanetarynebula get spiral shapes.

Page 15: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Type II Supernova is a “core collapse” and occurs when the core is finally pure iron, which cannot be fused to other elements. The core collapses

to a big ball of neutrons, which causes a shock wave to bounce back outward, which blows off the entire envelope

of the red giant, to form a supernova remnant.

Page 16: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 17: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Prior to detonation, the massive star can lose a large fraction of its mass. This material forms an expanding shell.

Page 18: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Computer simulations show lots of turbulence in the explosion.

Page 19: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 20: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 21: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Supernova Remnants

Vela supernova remnant

Other examples:

Cassiopeia A (link) (link) N63A (link)

Crab nebula

Page 22: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

M1 – the Crab Nebula

is from a supernova seen in year A.D. 1054

The remnant is 1800 pc away and the diameter is currently 2 pc.

Page 23: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 24: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

This supports the elaborate model of Type Ia supernovae

Page 25: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Supernova 1987A was not typical (link)

Page 26: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 27: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 28: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 30: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 31: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.
Page 32: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Eta Carinae will probably go supernova

in the next 100,000

years or so.

SEDS link

Page 33: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Cluster Evolution on the H–R Diagram

Page 34: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Newborn Cluster after 10 million years

Page 35: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Newborn Cluster after 10 million

years

Notice that there are

already some red giants from massive

stars that have already run out of

hydrogen fuel.

Page 36: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Young Cluster after 600 million years

Page 37: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Young Cluster after 600 million years

Notice that the cutoff is at Type A stars and that there are already

some white dwarfs.

Page 38: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Old Cluster after 12 billion years

Page 39: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

Old Cluster after 12 billion years

Many more stars give a better statistical

sample, and we see the main features

of stellar evolution.

Page 40: Chapter 10: The Death of Stars (part b) The evolution of low-mass vs. that of high-mass stars. Planetary nebulae and the formation of white dwarf stars.

The Cycle of Stellar Evolution


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