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The Suns of Other Worlds

The Suns of Other Worlds. What stars might be suitable planet hosts? How does the evolution stars affect the origin and evolution of life?. IU Astrobiology Workshop, June 2006 Caty Pilachowski, IU Astronomy. The Sun Today. Image credit: Solar Orbiting Heliospheric Observatory/MDI

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The Suns of Other Worlds

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  1. The Suns of Other Worlds • What stars might be suitable planet hosts? • How does the evolution stars affect the origin and evolution of life? IU Astrobiology Workshop, June 2006 Caty Pilachowski, IU Astronomy

  2. The Sun Today Image credit: Solar Orbiting Heliospheric Observatory/MDI www.spaceweather.com Can our knowledge of the Sun and stars guide us where to look for planets?

  3. AboutStars • Basic Properties of Stars • temperature • diameter • brightness • The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

  4. Familiar Stars

  5. The Nearest Stars

  6. 1000 ly A little farther out

  7. Properties of Stars We can’t see the stars’ diameters through a telescope. Stars are so far away that we see them just as points of light. If we know a star’s temperature and its luminosity, we can calculate its diameter. From its COLOR!! How do we determine a star’s temperature? Luminosity depends on…. TEMPERATURE - the hotter a star is, the brighter it is. DIAMETER – the bigger a star is, the brighter it is. Stars range in size from about the diameter of Jupiter to hundreds of times the Sun’s diameter

  8. The Nearest and the Brightest Exploring the Solar Neighborhood • What types of stars do we see in the sky? Exploring the HR Diagram: • How do our familiar stars fit into a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram? • What about the nearest stars?

  9. The Brightest Stars in the Sky (no need to copy these down!)

  10. Plot Absolute Magnitude vs. Temperature An HR Diagram for the Solar Neighborhood

  11. The Nearest Stars

  12. Plot Absolute Magnitude vs. Temperature

  13. Adding the Nearest Stars to the HR Diagram

  14. The HRDiagram Giants and Supergiants The most common stars in the Solar Neighborhood are dim and cool Main Sequence White Dwarf

  15. Summarizing Stellar Properties Luminosity: 10-4 - 106 LSun Temperature: 3,000 K - 50,000 K Mass: 0.08 - 100 MSun

  16. Only certain sizes and colors are allowed • Most stars fall on the “main sequence” • Main sequence stars are fusing hydrogen into helium in their cores The Sun is an ordinary main sequence star

  17. The mass of a main sequence star determines its luminosity and temperature • Main-sequence stars like the Sunare fusing hydrogen into helium in their cores • Massive main-sequence stars are hot (blue) and luminous • Less massive stars are cooler (yellow or red) and fainter

  18. What are the typical masses of newborn stars? Observations show that star formation makes many more low-mass stars than high-mass stars

  19. Nuclear Potential Energy (core) ~ 10 billion years Luminosity Why does the Sun Shine? • Nuclear fusion reactions • Hydrogen fuses into helium • Mass converted to energy

  20. How does nuclear fusion occur in the Sun? • The core’s extreme temperature and density are just right for nuclear fusion of hydrogen to helium through the proton-proton chain • Gravitational equilibrium acts as a thermostat to regulate the core temperature because fusion rate is very sensitive to temperature

  21. How do we know nuclear reactions are going on in the Sun? • Neutrinos created during fusion fly directly out of the Sun • These neutrinos can be detected on Earth

  22. Balancing Gravity Gravitational contraction: Provided energy that heated core as Sun was forming Contraction stopped when fusion began Gravitational equilibrium: Energy provided by fusion maintains the pressure

  23. Solar Thermostat – STABILITY! Decline in core temperature causes fusion rate to drop, so core contracts and heats up Rise in core temperature causes fusion rate to rise, so core expands and cools down

  24. Stellar Mass and Fusion • The mass of a main sequence star determines its core pressure and temperature • Stars of higher mass have higher core temperature and more rapid fusion, making those stars both more luminous and shorter-lived • Stars of lower mass have cooler cores and slower fusion rates, giving them smaller luminosities and longer lifetimes

  25. Mass & Lifetime Sun’s life expectancy: 10 billion years Life expectancy of 10 MSun star: 10 times as much fuel, uses it 104 times as fast 10 million years ~ 10 billion years x 10 / 104 Life expectancy of 0.1 MSun star: 0.1 times as much fuel, uses it 0.01 times as fast 100 billion years ~ 10 billion years x 0.1 / 0.01

  26. Main-Sequence Lifetimes High Mass: High Luminosity Large Radius Blue Short-Lived Low Mass: Low Luminosity Small Radius Red Long-Lived

  27. Explaining the HR Diagram • Energy • Gravity • Energy Transport During hydrogen burning, basic physics forces a star to lie on the main sequence. A star’s position on the MS depends on its mass.

  28. Star Clusters • Stellar Evolution in Action • Stars in clusters tell us about stellar evolution • Star clusters tell us the ages of stars

  29. Star Clusters and Stellar Lives • Our knowledge of the life stories of stars comes from comparing mathematical models of stars with observations • Star clusters are particularly useful because they contain stars of different mass that were born about the same time

  30. Constructing a Star Cluster HR Diagram We measure the brightness and temperature of each star in the cluster.

  31. What’s this B-V color? • Astronomers measure the brightness of stars in different colors • Brightness measured in blue light is called “B” (for “Blue”) • Brightness measured in yellow light is called “V” (for “Visual) • Astronomers quantify the “color” of a star by using the difference in brightness between the brightness in the B and V spectral regions • The B-V color is related to the slope of the spectrum

  32. The slope of the spectrum is different at different temperatures

  33. Cluster HR Diagrams Hotter stars are brighter in blue light than in yellow light, and have low values of B-V color, and are found on the left side of the diagram. Cooler stars are brighter in yellow light than in blue light, have larger values of B-V color, and are found on the right side of the diagram. hotter cooler

  34. The HR diagrams of clusters of different ages look very different

  35. Ages of Star Clusters The “bluest” stars left on the main sequence of the cluster tell us the cluster’s age. As the cluster ages, the bluest stars run out of hydrogen for fusion and lose their “shine” hotter cooler

  36. Main Sequence Turnoffs of Star Clusters Here we see a series of HR diagrams for sequentially older star clusters that have been superimposed Burbidge and Sandage 1958, Astrophysical Journal

  37. We can determine ages fromthe “color” of the main sequence “turnoff”

  38. The Jewels of the Night • NGC 4755 is an open star cluster in the southern constellation Crux • It is popularly known as the Jewel Box because an early catalog described it as a "superb piece of jewelry“ • Distance ~7500 light years Image from the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory's 0.9-meter telescope

  39. How Old Are the Jewels? • Create a color-magnitude diagram of the Jewelbox and estimate its age

  40. The End of Solar-type Stars Main Sequence Planetary Nebula When the carbon core reaches a density that is high enough, the star blows the rest of its hydrogen into space. Red Giant White Dwarf The hot, dense, bare core is exposed! Surface temperatures as hot as 100,000 degrees The hot core heats the expelled gas and makes it glow

  41. Planetary Nebulae • Fusion ends with a pulse that ejects the H and He into space as a planetary nebula • The core left behind becomes a “white dwarf”

  42. Earth’s Fate • Sun’s radius will grow to near current radius of Earth’s orbit

  43. Earth’s Fate • Sun’s luminosity will rise to 1,000 times its current level—too hot for life on Earth

  44. What about Massive Stars? • Massive stars continue to generate energy by nuclear reactions until they have converted all the hydrogen and helium in their cores into iron. • Once the core is iron, no more energy can be generated • The core collapses and the star explodes SUPERNOVA!

  45. Iron builds up in core until degeneracy pressure can no longer resist gravity Core then suddenly collapses, creating supernova explosion

  46. Is life on Earth safe from harm caused by supernovae? Earth is safe at the present time because there are no massive stars within 50 light years of the Sun. But other types of supernovae are possible…

  47. Low mass stars long-lived stable More massive stars short lives often variable What stars might be good hosts for life?

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