1 / 17

High mass endings

High mass endings. Answers from you folks on yesterday’s quiz. Differences between a dying low mass vs. a dying high mass star: No He flash in a high mass star death. Low mass stars end in white dwarfs, high mass stars end in supernovae.

pia
Télécharger la présentation

High mass endings

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. High mass endings

  2. Answers from you folks on yesterday’s quiz. Differences between a dying low mass vs. a dying high mass star: • No He flash in a high mass star death. • Low mass stars end in white dwarfs, high mass stars end in supernovae. • Heavy elements formed in death sequence of a high mass star. • Low mass stars end in white dwarfs with planetary nebulae around them. • The weight watcher rule: big things go early, smaller things live longer. Good Job. Folks !!!!!!

  3. Large mass stars and the main sequence What do they do on the main sequence? • CNO cycle: Carbon, nitrogen, oxygen cycle • High temperatures needed for this cycle to take place (~ 15 million 0K). • H is used along with C as a catalyst to produce He atoms.

  4. Large mass stars on the main sequence continued… 3. Stay stable; hydrostatic equilibrium Main Sequence turn-off • Almost the Same as with low mass star: • Depletion of H in core • He core contracts • Temperatures rise igniting H layer • Increased pressure drives envelope of star outward creating a super giant or giant. • This cycle repeats many times depending on mass. • When it does, at each new stage heavier elements are created.

  5. Fusion of heavy elements. • As temperature increases with depth, the ash of each burning stage becomes the fuel for the next stage. • So as each element is burned to completion at the center, the core contracts again, heats again, and so on… • Once inner core turns to Iron, fires cease in the core, internal outward pressure dwindles and hydrostatic equilibrium is destroyed. Gravity takes over and……..

  6. BanG !!!!! • The star implodes! (falls in on itself!) • Core temperature rises again, all heavy elements in core undergo Photodisintegration, undoing the fusion process of the previous 10 million years. End up with electrons, protons, neutrons, and photons in core. • Core compresses, stops and rebounds with a vengeance! • During this rebound, a shock wave sweeps through the star blasting all the overlying layers, including the heavy elements just formed outside the iron core into space: a Type 2Supernova has occurred. • The brightness of a supernova may rival the brightness of the entire galaxy in which it resides. This period is short ~ few days, maybe a month.

  7. Big and little bangs • Novae and supernovae are two different types of beasts. • A nova is an increase in the brightness of an accreting white dwarf star that is undergoing a surface explosion. • The temporary and rapid change in luminosity can occur over a period of a few days. • On the average, 2 or 3 novae are observed every year. • As to type 1 supernovae, a star has to have a buddy for this to occur.

  8. Type 1 supernovae and white dwarfs • When an accreting white dwarf exceeds a maximum value of 1.4 solar masses (Chandresekhar mass), electrons inside cannot provide the pressure needed to support the star. • Star begins to collapse, temperature rises to the point where carbon fusion takes place. • Fusion taking place everywhere throughout the star causes it to explode – Type 1 supernova (carbon-detonation supernova). • Star is believed to be blasted to bits

  9. Type 2 supernova remnant • Crab nebula • A supernova remnant. • 1st seen in 1054 A.D. • 1800 pc from Earth. • About 2 pc wide • Has a neutron star, pulsar.. Speaking of which =>

  10. Large mass star endings (chapter 22) • What remains after a supernova (type 2) explosion? More than what you get from a type 1 explosion, that’s for sure! 1. Neutron stars 2. Black holes

  11. Neutron stars A ball (size: that of a large city ~ 20 km) of neutrons left after a supernova explosion. Density: 1017 – 1018 kg/m3 , weight: thimbleful of neutron star material would weigh 100 million tons. Gravity extremely powerful; you’d weigh a lot more on this star! Carry strong magnetic fields. Spin very fast! (a consequence of the conservation of angular momentum) Black Holes Chandrasekhar limit for a neutron star: 3 solar masses. Above this limit the star cannot support itself against its own gravity – collapse. General Relativity says that this collapse punches a hole in space-time called a singularity. This singularity is surrounded by a an event horizon, which defines the absolute edge outside of which a photon of light can escape. Creatures of the deep

  12. Lets look at neutron stars first; • If you’re a neutron star you can decide to announce your presence by becoming a Pulsar Crab pulsar: Hubble telescope

  13. Pulsar emission • Extremely rapid rotation and combination of a strong magnetic field dictates signal properties seen by us. • We see the pulses when they sweep across the Earth Discovered by Jocelyn Bell, a grad. Student at Cambridge University, In 1967. Her thesis advisor won the Nobel Prize for it in 1974.

  14. Black holes and the speed of light • Special relativity says that the limiting speed in the universe is the speed of light.

  15. Black holes and curved space-time Proof • General relativity says that any mass creates a dent or depression in space-time. • The bigger the mass, the greater the depression Page 584 figure 22.15

  16. proof Deflection of starlight measured in 1919, confirmed the general theory. Planetary orbits deviate from Kepler’s ellipses, they actually precess

  17. So.. What happens around a Black Hole? • Gravitational red shift. • Light energy is drained near the event horizon. • No escape of light/radiation upon entering event horizon. • Getting close to event horizon, causes spagetification, when you’re stretched out long ways.

More Related