1 / 18

The Grouping of Stars in the H-R Diagram

1000 R sun. Sizes scale. 10 R sun. 100 R sun. 1 R sun. The Grouping of Stars in the H-R Diagram. The Major Categories of Stars The Main Sequence , The Supergiants , The Giants , The White Dwarfs . Main Sequence – healthy stars , fusing hydrogen in the core.

Télécharger la présentation

The Grouping of Stars in the H-R Diagram

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. 1000 Rsun Sizes scale 10 Rsun 100 Rsun 1 Rsun The Grouping of Stars in the H-R Diagram • The Major Categories of Stars • The Main Sequence, • The Supergiants, • The Giants, • The White Dwarfs. • Main Sequence – healthy stars, fusing hydrogen in the core. • Giants and supergiants – dying stars, fusing helium and heavier elements. • White dwarfs – dead stars, core nuclear fusion have stopped.

  2. From Clouds to Protostar • Stars form in cold(10-30 K), dense (although still very low density compared with the density we are used to) molecule clouds • The molecule clouds are composed of mostly hydrogen and helium. • The low temperature allows the formation of hydrogen molecule H2 – hence molecule clouds. • Low temperature and high density allow gravity to compress the clouds with resistance from thermal pressure. • Because of the low density, the gas can radiate away its thermal radiation quickly. Without thermal pressure to resist the gravitational contraction, the initial gravitational contraction proceeds quickly. The temperature of the gas remain low (below 100 K), and emits in the infrared wavelengths. • As the cloud undergoes gravitational contraction, the gas heats up (to ~ 100 K) as the density increases, eventually forms a dense, hot protostar! Molecule cloud glows in the infrared, but is dark in the visible light image!

  3. Disks and Jets • The random motion of the molecule can contain a net angular momentum, as the cloud contract, this angular momentum is conserved, and resulted in the fast rotation of the protostar, and the subsequent formation of a disk and jets • Details of how the jets are formed is still unknown. Magnetic field probably plays an important role!

  4. Star or Brown Dwarf? Whether a protostar eventually becomes a star depends on its mass. • For protostar with mass larger than 0.08 M⊙, the temperature can eventually rise to more than 10 million K, hot enough to start nuclear fusion  A Star Is Born! • If the mass of the protostar is less than 0.08 M⊙, then nuclear fusion cannot start A Brown Dwarf! • Brown Dwarf slowly radiate away its thermal energy, contract into smaller and smaller size. • When subatomic particles are tightly compressed, electron degeneracy pressure arise to resist the contraction of gravitation! Degeneracy Pressure – Chapter 13 Dead Stars

  5. The Origin of Degenerate Pressure • Degenerate pressure arises from two fundamental laws of quantum physics: • Pauli’s Exclusion Principle(for the fermions, such as electrons, protons, and neutrons). • No two particles (fermions) can occupy the same quantum mechanical state simultaneously. • Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle • The product of the uncertainty in the position of a particle and its momentum is always greater than the Planck constant • x p ≥ h • where x is the uncertainty in the position of the particle, p is the uncertainty in the momentum of the particle, and h = 6.626  10-27 gm cm2/sec is the Planck’s constant. • To be continued…

  6. 1000 Rsun Sizes scale 10 Rsun 100 Rsun 1 Rsun The Grouping of Stars in the H-R Diagram • The Major Categories of Stars • The Main Sequence, • The Supergiants, • The Giants, • The White Dwarfs. • The Instability Strip(variable stars). • Main Sequence – healthy stars, fusing hydrogen in the core. • Giants and supergiants – dying stars, fusing helium and heavier elements. • White dwarfs – dead stars, core nuclear fusion have stopped.

  7. Note that the sizes in this figure are not to scale! • Orbit of Mars • Orbit of Mercury Relative Sizes of Stars—From Supergiants to White Dwarfs Supergiant ~ 100 – 1000 Rsun Giant ~ 10 – 100 Rsun Main-Sequence Star – Sun = 1Rsun White Dwarf ~ 0.01 Rsun About the size of Earth!

  8. The Main Sequence Stars • Most of the stars we see in the sky are main sequence stars! • Properties of Main Sequence Stars • Energy-generating mechanism: Hydrogen burning (Fusion of hydrogen into helium). • The hot, blue stars are more massive, and larger in size. • The large, hot, blue stars has short lifetime. • Small, cool, red stars has long lifetime. • Upper limit of stellar mass: ~ 100 Msun • The core temperature becomes so high that radiation pressure (pressure exerted by photons) upsets the equilibrium between the thermal pressure and the gravitational pull. The star becomes unstable. • Lower limit of stellar mass: ~ 0.08 Msun • The core temperature of objects with mass less than 0.08 Msun is not hot enough to trigger hydrogen burning. • Jupiter is 0.001 Msu

  9. Relative Sizes of Main Sequence Stars The mass of the main-sequence star determine its luminosity, surface temperature, radius, and lifetime. • Massive stars – hotter, brighter, larger, and shorter lifetime • Light stars – cooler, dimmer, smaller, and longer lifetime. Although the mass of Spica is 100 times that of Proxima Centauri, its lifetime is 100,000 times shorter. Why? ~10 Rsun ~3 Rsun 1 Rsun 0.1 Rsun

  10. The Lifetime of Stars • The lifetime of a star is determined by how fast it burns its supply of hydrogen…This hydrogen burning rate can be inferred from the luminosity of the star. • The Mass-Luminosity Relation • Once we have observationally determined the luminosity and mass of many main sequence stars, we find that the higher the mass M of a star is, the higher is its luminosity (L). • L/L⊙ = (M/M⊙)3.5 Note: The Mass-Luminosity relation applies to main-sequence stars only! For exmaple, • A 10 M⊙star is roughly (103.5 ~ ) 3,000 brighter, or burning its hydrogen times 3,000 faster. • We know that the lifetime of the Sun is about 10 billion years. • The more massive star would have a lifetime of about 10 × 10 billion years ÷ 3,000 ~ 30 million years.

  11. Star Clusters The Pleiades • Stars are formed from giant clouds of gas, with enough material to form many stars. • Stars in the same cluster lie at about the same distance from Earth • Stars in the same cluster are formed roughly at the same time. • Open Clusters • Found in the disk of the galaxy. • Contains a few thousand stars. • Span about 30 light-years. • Globular Clusters • Found both in the disk and in the halo of the galaxy. • Up to one million stars. • Spans about 60 to 150 light-years.

  12. Dating the Age of Star Clusters • When a star cluster is born, it contains stars spanning the entire range of the H-R diagram. • As the cluster ages, the high-luminosity, hot, blue stars move away from the main sequence curve first. • The point where the curve of the H-R diagram deviates from the main sequence curve (the main-sequence turn-off point) indicates the age of the cluster. Main sequence turn-off point New-born 100 million years Luminosity Luminosity Luminosity 10 billion years Main sequence curve Temperature Temperature Temperature Age of the Cluster

  13. Examples of H-R Diagram of Star Clusters • M4 main-sequence turn-off point • Age: 12 ~ 14 billion years. • Age of the universe must be at least 12 ~ 14 billion years.

  14. Low Mass Stars • Low Mass Stars: M < 8 – 10 M⊙ • Evolutionary History • The helium produced by the proton-proton chain (hydrogen burning) accumulates at the core. Because the temperature required to start helium burning is much higher (~ 100 million degrees), there isn’t enough thermal pressure at the core to resist the gravitational contraction (just yet). • As a main sequence star exhausts its corehydrogen supply, its energy output is reduced  without the thermal pressure of the hydrogen fusion, gravitation contraction continue. • The core temperature rises, as well as the outer layer of the star where there are still substantial supply of hydrogen, triggering shell hydrogen burning, at a much higher temperature than that in the main sequence stars. • The high temperature shell hydrogen burning produces more energy than the same star in its main sequence core hydrogen burning stage Higher luminosity. • The high thermal pressure of the shell hydrogen burning push the envelop of the star outward, much larger than its size at the main sequence stage giant. • The large surface area of the giant cools off fast red giant.

  15. Structure of Red Giants • Inert Helium core  Most of the mass of the star is concentrated at the helium core. • Hydrogen-burning shell. • Hydrogen envelop.

  16. Helium-Burning Star • If a star is heavy enough, the temperature at its helium core can get high enough (> 100 million degrees) to start helium burning. • Helium burning (triple alpha process): three helium nuclei (alpha particle) fuse to form a carbon. The fusion of the core helium inflates the core of the star, pushing the hydrogen burning shell outward, causing its temperature to drop. • Lower total luminosity. • The core helium eventually are exhausted, leaving a carbon core. Gravitational contraction continue. Gravitational contraction eventually heat up the helium outside the core to start the shell helium burning at a higher temperature. • Shell helium burning, like shell hydrogen burning, generates much more energy than the star at core helium burning stage -- Red giant again • A steady stellar wind slowly push the outer envelop of the star away, forming planetary nebula. • The planetary nebula eventually disperse, leaving a cooling carbon core – White Dwarf

  17. The Evolution of Low Mass Main-Sequence Star Click image to start animation…

  18. Planetary Nebulae

More Related