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Announcements

Announcements. Quiz 4 - March 4 Stellar evolution Low-mass stars Binaries High-mass stars Supernovae Synthesis of the elements WWW lab is available at the class WWW site. Last Time.

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Announcements

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  1. Announcements • Quiz 4 - March 4 • Stellar evolution • Low-mass stars • Binaries • High-mass stars • Supernovae • Synthesis of the elements • WWW lab is available at the class WWW site

  2. Last Time • What terminates the evolution of a star up the RGB? Helium Flash and onset of helium fusion • What is the energy source for a HB star? core helium fusion + shell h fusion • What is the equilibrium for a WD? gravity vs e- degeneracy

  3. Last Time • For a 1 solar mass star, order the phases of evolution: (1) Protostar (2) main sequence (3) RGB (4) Horizontal Branch (5) AGB (6) Planetary Nebula (7) White Dwarf

  4. PN AGB He flash HB RGB LUMINOSITY ZAMS WD cooling Hot ------Temperature------ cool

  5. Stellar Evolution • When hydrogen fusion starts at the end of the protostar stage, a star is born on the `zero-age main sequence’. • As hydrogen is being converted into helium in the core of a star, its structure changes slowly and stellar evolution begins.

  6. Stellar Evolution • The structure of the Sun has been changing continuously since it settled in on the main sequence. • The Hydrogen in the core is being converted into Helium.

  7. Stellar Evolution • As the helium core grows, it compresses. Helium doesn’t fuse to heavier elements for two reasons. (1) with 2 p+ per nucleus, the electric repulsion force is higher than was the case for H-fusion. This means that helium fusion requires a higher temperature than hydrogen fusion -- 100 million K (2) He4 + He4 = Be8. This reaction doesn’t release energy, it requires input energy. This particular Be isotope is very unstable.

  8. Stellar Evolution • As the Helium core contracts, it releases gravitational potential energy and heats up. • Hydrogen fusion continues in a shell around the helium core. • Once a significant helium core is built, the star has two energy sources. • Curiously, as the fuel is being used up in the core of a star, its luminosity is increasing

  9. Stellar Evolution • Stars begin to evolve off the zero-age main sequence from day 1. • Compared to 4.5 Gyr ago, the radius of the Sun has increased by 6% and the luminosity by 40%. 4.5Gyr ago Today

  10. Stellar Evolution • In the case of the Sun (or any 1Mo star) the gradual increase in radius and luminosity will continue for another 5 billion years. • While hydrogen fusion is the dominant energy source, there is a useful thermostat operating. If the Sun contracted and heated up, the fusion rates would increase and cause the Sun to re-expand.

  11. Evolution to Red Giant • As the contracting helium core grows and the total energy generated by GPE and the hydrogen fusion shell increases. • L goes up! • As L goes up the star also expands.

  12. Red Giants • Hydrostatic equilibrium is lost and the tendency of the Sun to expand wins a little bit at a time. The Sun is becoming a Red Giant. Will eventually reach: • L -> 2000Lo • R -> 0.5AU • Tsurface->3500k

  13. Red Giant 100Ro 108years L 3Ro, 1010years Temperature

  14. Sun as a Red Giant • When the Sun becomes a Red Giant Mercury and Venus will be vaporized, the Earth burned to a crisp. Long before the Sun reaches the tip of the RGB (red giant branch) the oceans will be boiled away and most life will be gone. • The most `Earthlike’ environment at this point will be Titan, a moon of Saturn.

  15. RGB Evolution As the Sun approaches the tip of the RGB Central T Central Density Sun 15x106 k 102 grams/cm2 Red Giant 100x106k 105 grams/cm2 For stars around 1Mo, with these conditions in the core a strange quantum mechanical property of e- dominates the pressure.

  16. Electron Degeneracy • Electrons are particles called `fermions’ (rather than `bosons’) that obey a law of nature called the Pauli Exclusion Principle. • This law says that you can only have two electrons per unit 6-Dphase-space volume in a gas.

  17. Electron Degeneracy • When you have two e- per phase-space cell in a gas the gas is said to be degenerate and it has reached a density maximum -- you can’t pack it any tighter. • Such a gas is supported against gravitational collapse by electron degeneracy pressure. • This is what supports the helium core of a red giant star as it approaches the tip of the RGB.

  18. Helium fusion/flash • The helium in the core can start to fuse when the density and temperature are high enough for the `triple-alpha’ reaction: He4 + He4 -> Be8 Be8 + He4 -> C12 The Berylium falls apart in 10-12 seconds so you need not only high enough T to overcome the electric forces, you also need very high density.

  19. Helium Flash • The Temp and Density get high enough for the triple-alpha reaction as a star approaches the tip of the RGB. • Because the core is supported by electron degeneracy (with no temperature dependence) when the triple-alpha starts, there is no corresponding expansion of the core. So the temperature skyrockets and the fusion rate grows tremendously in the `helium flash’.

  20. Helium Flash • The big increase in the core temperature adds momentum phase space and within a couple of hours of the onset of the helium flash, the electrons gas is no longer degenerate and the core settles down into `normal’ helium fusion. • There is little outward sign of the helium flash, but the rearrangment of the core stops the trip up the RGB and the star settles onto the horizontal branch.

  21. Horizontal Branch Horizontal branch RGB

  22. Horizontal Branch • Stars on the horizontal branch have similarities to main-sequence stars Helium fusion in the core Hydrogen fusion in a shell

  23. The Second Ascent Giant Branch • Horizontal-branch stars (like main-sequence stars) begin to use up their fuel in the core. • In this case, the star is building up a Carbon core. For stars near 1Mo the temperature never gets high enough for Carbon fusion. • The core begins to contract, releasing gravitational potential energy and increasing the fusion rates in the He and H fusion shells. Does this sound familiar?

  24. Asymptotic Giant Branch Carbon Core Helium fusion shell Hydrogen Fusion shell

  25. Asymptotic Giant Branch • This is like the transition from the main sequence to the Red Giant Branch. • Stars evolve off the HB up and right in the HR-Diagram on a track parallel and above the RGB. Now, the energy generation is much more erratic. The triple-alpha process rate scales with T30(!). AGB stars undergo `Shell flashes’.

  26. Asymptotic branch Horizontal branch RGB L Temperature

  27. Planetary Nebula Stage • The trip up the AGB (or `second ascent giant branch’) gets terminated when the star’s outer envelope becomes detached and begins to drift off into space. (!!) • The former envelope shines in the light of emission lines. • As the envelope expands and becomes transparent the very hot core of the AGB star can be seen at its center.

  28. Planetary Nebulae • The outer envelope expanding out as a shell appears as a ring in the sky.

  29. Planetary Nebulae • The emission is similar to that from HII regions. Ultraviolet photons from the hot former AGB-star core ionize atoms in the shell. On recombination, photons are produced.

  30. Planetary Nebulae Shells • The ejection mechanism for the shell is a combination of winds from the core, photon pressure, perhaps the shell flashes and the large radius of the star. • The shell expands into space at relatively low speed (20 km/sec). • Approximately 50% of the AGB star mass is ejected.

  31. Planetary Nebulae Shell • The shell expands and is visible for about 30,000 years growing to a size of more than a light year. • The shell is enhanced in the abundance of He, Carbon, Oxygen (because of convection during the AGB phase). This is one of the means by which `Galactic Chemical Evolution’ proceeds. • There are about 30,000 PN in the Galaxy at any time.

  32. Planetary Nebulae Central `Star’ • The object in the center of the nebula is the former core of the AGB star. (1) It is hot! T>150,000k initially (2) Supported by e- degeneracy (3) Mass ~ 0.6Mo (4) Radius ~ 6000km (Earth) (5) Density ~ 109 kg/m3 A thimble of material at this density would weight about 5 tons on Earth.

  33. Planetary Nebulae Central `Star’ • The central `star’ isn’t a star because it has no energy source. This is a white dwarf. • Supported against gravity by e- degeneracy. • Lots of residual heat, no energy source, a white dwarf is like a hot ember. As it radiates energy into space, the white dwarf cools off. • There is an upper limit to the mass of a WD set by e-degeneracy. 1.4Mo is the Chandrasekar Limit.

  34. White Dwarf • Energy source: none • Equilibrium: e- degeneracy vs gravity • Size: 6000km (Earth)

  35. White Dwarfs • WDs appear in the HR-Diagram in the upper left and VERY rapidly evolve downward and to the right. L White dwarf cooling curve Temperature

  36. White Dwarfs • At least 15% of the stellar mass in the solar neighborhood is in the form of WDs. They are very common, though hard to see.

  37. White Dwarf Cosmochronology • The WDs in the solar neighborhood have an interesting story to tell: This drop off in WDs at low L and T is because of the finite age of the Galaxy # of WD high low Luminosity (or Temp)

  38. White Dwarfs in the Galaxy • We think that all stars with initial main-sequence mass less than around 6Mo become white dwarfs. • When we look at the number of WDs at different luminosity (or temperature) there are some interesting bumps and wiggles AND a dramatic dropoff at the Luminosity that corresponds to a cooling age of 11 Gyr.

  39. Evolution of 1Mo Star

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