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12.3 Life as a High-Mass Star Our Goals for Learning What are the life stages of a high mass star? How do high-mass stars make the elements necessary for.

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Presentation on theme: "12.3 Life as a High-Mass Star Our Goals for Learning What are the life stages of a high mass star? How do high-mass stars make the elements necessary for."— Presentation transcript:

1 12.3 Life as a High-Mass Star Our Goals for Learning What are the life stages of a high mass star? How do high-mass stars make the elements necessary for life? How does a high-mass star die?

2 What are the life stages of a high mass star?

3 High-Mass Star’s Life Early stages are similar to those of low-mass star (with some exceptions): Main Sequence: H fuses to He in core (a few million years; method is CNO cycle) Red Supergiant: H fuses to He in shell around inert He core Helium Core Burning: He fuses to C in core (no contraction due to extremely high temperature) Inert C core: after a few hundred thousand years and He fuel depleted; He shell and H shell doing fusion

4 CNO cycle is just another way to fuse H into He, using carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen as catalysts CNO cycle is main mechanism for H fusion in high mass stars because core temperature is higher

5 High-Mass Star’s Life C core shrinks and P, T, and ρ rise He fusion shell exists between core and H fusion shell Eventually core T high enough for C fusion (may last only a few hundred years) Star luminosity and outer temperature don’t change rapidly, but core does

6 High-mass stars become supergiants after core H runs out Luminosity doesn’t change much but radius gets far larger

7 How do high mass stars make the elements necessary for life?

8 Big Bang made 75% H, 25% He – stars make everything else

9 Helium fusion can make carbon in low-mass stars

10 CNO cycle can change C into N and O

11 Helium-capture reactions add two protons at a time in high mass stars

12 Evidence for helium capture: Higher abundances of elements with even numbers of protons

13 Helium capture builds C into O, Ne, Mg, …

14 Advanced nuclear fusion reactions require extremely high temperatures Only high-mass stars can attain high enough core temperatures before degeneracy pressure stops contraction

15 Advanced reactions make heavier elements

16 Advanced nuclear burning occurs in multiple shells

17 Iron is dead end for fusion because nuclear reactions involving iron do not release energy (Fe has lowest mass per nuclear particle)

18 How does a high mass star die?

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

20 Core degeneracy pressure goes away because electrons combine with protons, making neutrons and neutrinos Neutrons collapse to the center, forming a neutron star

21 Energy and neutrons released in supernova explosion enables elements heavier than iron to form

22 Elements made during supernova explosion

23 Crab Nebula: Remnant of supernova observed in 1054 A.D.

24 Supernova 1987A is the nearest supernova observed in the last 400 years beforeafter

25 The next nearby supernova?

26 What have we learned? What are the life stages of a high-mass star? A high-mass star lives a much shorter life than a low-mass star, fusing hydrogen into helium via the CNO cycle. After exhausting its core hydrogen, a high-mass star begins hydrogen shell burning and then goes through a series of stages burning successively heavier elements. The furious rate of this fusion makes the star swell in size to become a supergiant.

27 What have we learned? How do high-mass stars make the elements necessary for life? In its final stages of life, a high-mass star’s core becomes hot enough to fuse carbon and other heavy elements. The variety of different fusion reactions produces a wide range of elements— including all the elements necessary for life—that are then released into space when the star dies.

28 What have we learned? How does a high-mass star die? A high-mass star dies in the explosion of a supernova, scattering newly produced elements into space and leaving a neutron star or black hole behind. The supernova occurs after fusion begins to pile up iron in the high-mass star’s core. Because iron fusion cannot release energy, the core cannot hold off the crush of gravity for long. In the instant that gravity overcomes degeneracy pressure, the core collapses and the star explodes.


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