Fill in the chart when you see a yellow star. Take notes on the stars and events as well.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Notes 30.2 Stellar Evolution
Advertisements

Stars The life and death of stars in our universe.
George Observatory The Colorful Night Sky.
Life Cycle of a Star.
PHYS The Main Sequence of the HR Diagram During hydrogen burning the star is in the Main Sequence. The more massive the star, the brighter and hotter.
Stellar Evolution Describe how a protostar becomes a star.
Warm Up 6/6/08 If star A is farther from Earth than star B, but both stars have the same absolute magnitude, what is true about their apparent magnitude?
Life Cycle of Stars. Omega / Swan Nebula (M17) Stars are born from great clouds of gas and dust called Stars are born from great clouds of gas and dust.
Star Life Cycle.
A star is born… A star is made up of a large amount of gas, in a relatively small volume. A nebula, on the other hand, is a large amount of gas and dust,
Star Life Cycle.
Life Cycles of Stars.
Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution. Infrared Image of Helix Nebula.
Objectives Determine the effect of mass on a star’s evolution.
Stellar Evolution. Basic Structure of Stars Mass and composition of stars determine nearly all of the other properties of stars Mass and composition of.
Astronomy Picture of the Day. Recall: Luminosity - Intrinsic property of a star. Apparent Brightness – the brightness we perceive a star to be from Earth.
Chapter 26 Part 1 of Section 2: Evolution of Stars
NOT THOSE TYPES OF STARS! LIFE CYCLE OF STARS WHAT IS A STAR? Star = ball of plasma undergoing nuclear fusion. Stars give off large amounts of energy.
Star Light, Star Bright.
Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe Section 2 Section 2: Stellar Evolution Preview Key Ideas Classifying Stars Star Formation The Main-Sequence Stage Leaving.
THE LIFE CYCLES OF STARS. In a group, create a theory that explains: (a)The origin of stars Where do they come from? (b)The death of stars Why do stars.
Stellar Life Stages Star Birth and Death.
Stellar Evolution. Clouds of gas and dust are floating around in space These are called “nebula”
Birth and Life of a Star What is a star? A star is a really hot ball of gas, with hydrogen fusing into helium at its core. Stars spend the majority of.
JP ©1 2 3 Stars are born, grow up, mature, and die. A star’s mass determines its lifepath. Let M S = mass of the Sun = ONE SOLAR MASS Stellar Evolution.
Astronomy – Stellar Evolution What is a Star? Stars are hot bodies of glowing gas that start their life in Nebulae.(1) 2.
The Sun is a mass of Incandescent Gas A gigantic nuclear furnace.
The Life Cycles of Stars RVCC Planetarium - Last updated 7/23/03.
1 Stellar Lifecycles The process by which stars are formed and use up their fuel. What exactly happens to a star as it uses up its fuel is strongly dependent.
Classifying Stars The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram (H-R Diagram) – Graph plotting the surface temperatures of stars against their luminosity (total energy.
Life Cycle of a Star. Nebula(e) A Star Nursery! –Stars are born in nebulae. –Nebulae are huge clouds of dust and gas –Protostars (young stars) are formed.
Ch Stellar Evolution. Nebula—a cloud of dust and gas. 70% Hydrogen, 28% Helium, 2% heavier elements. Gravity pulls the nebula together; it spins.
Life Cycle of Stars Nebula hundreds of light years in size contract under gravity
A Note Taking Experience.
Life Cycle of Stars Birth Place of Stars:
Chapter 30 Section 2 Handout
LIFE CYCLE OF A STAR.
Studying the Lives of Stars  Stars don’t last forever  Each star is born, goes through its life cycle, and eventually die.
Life Cycle of a Star Star Life Cycle: Stars are like humans. They are born, live and then die.
The Life Cycle of a Star By Andy Kimmelshue. The birth of a star Stars are formed from gas and dust pulled together by gravity inside of a Nebula. A.
Life Cycle of a Star The changes that a star goes through is determined by how much mass the star has. Two Types of Life Cycles: Average Star- a star with.
EARTH & SPACE SCIENCE Chapter 30 Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe 30.2 Stellar Evolution.
The Life Cycle of Stars. Cycle for all stars Stage One- Born in vast, dense clouds of gas, mostly hydrogen along with small amounts of helium, and dust.
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
Unit 1: Space The Study of the Universe.  Mass governs a star’s temperature, luminosity, and diameter.  Mass Effects:  The more massive the star, the.
The life cycle of stars from birth to death
STARS.
STARS.
The Star Cycle. Birth Stars begin in a DARK NEBULA (cloud of gas and dust)… aka the STELLAR NURSERY The nebula begins to contract due to gravity in.
STARS & their life cycles Like us, stars are born, grow older, become middle aged and eventually die!!! Unlike us, stars take billions of years to complete.
Life of Stars. Star Birth – Nebular Model Huge clouds of gas and dust occur in space – may be exploded stars Most Nebulae (gas clouds) are invisible –
 How Stars Form: -The space around stars contains gas/dust  A nebula is a large cloud of dust/gas, some nebulas glow lit by other stars and some are.
Stellar Evolution Chapters 16, 17 & 18. Stage 1: Protostars Protostars form in cold, dark nebulae. Interstellar gas and dust are the raw materials from.
Stellar Evolution (Star Life-Cycle). Basic Structure Mass governs a star’s temperature, luminosity, and diameter. In fact, astronomers have discovered.
Life Cycle of a Star! Chapter 28 Section 3.
The Engines of our Universe
Stellar Evolution Chapters 16, 17 & 18.
Notes: 24.3 Evolution of Stars.
The Star Lifecycle.
A Note Taking Experience.
The lifecycles of stars
Crab nebula G A S N D U T Carina nebula Cone nebula Orion nebula.
Astronomy – Stellar Evolution
You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members. Astronomers observe stars of different ages to infer how stars.
Astronomy Star Notes.
The Life and Death of Stars
You can often predict how a baby will look as an adult by looking at other family members. Astronomers observe stars of different ages to infer how stars.
Lives of Stars.
The lifecycles of stars
Stellar Evolution Chapter 30.2.
Presentation transcript:

Fill in the chart when you see a yellow star. Take notes on the stars and events as well.

All stars begin the same way, but the last stages of life depend on it’s mass. The birth place of stars are Nebulas, often referred to as “stellar nurseries”. Nebulas are clouds of dust and gas. STARS

Emission: emit radiation, usually appear red Reflection: reflect light of nearby star, usually appear blue. Dark: block light, appear black. 3 TYPES OF NEBULAE

Dark Nebula

Horsehead Nebula (Orion Constellation)

Reflection Nebula

Tarantula Nebula

Iris Nebula

Veil Nebula

Lagoon Nebula

Witch Head Nebula

Witch Broom Nebula

Bubble Nebula

Trifid Nebula

Rosetta Nebula

Gravitational attraction causes gas and dust to condense, spin and heat up which forms a proto-star. Nebula: Accretion disc

There are no nuclear reactions inside the proto- star, it is not a star yet! Proto-stars

If there is not enough mass to create a protostar, a Brown Dwarf forms. Some astronomers consider Jupiter a Brown Dwarf… Brown Dwarfs

Hydrogen Bomb Eventually the gas shrinks enough that its temperature and density become high enough, that a nuclear fusion reaction starts in its core! -- It becomes a giant Hydrogen Bomb! A star is born…

At 10 Million K, Hydrogen begins nuclear fusion to form helium and the star begins to shine. It will now be visible on an H-R Diagram. A star is born…

The star shines as nuclear reactions inside produce light and heat. Main Sequence Star

How long and how hot the star burns is determined by the star’s mass but… Eventually, stars begin to run out of their fuel hydrogen. The problem is that pressure begins to decrease but gravity stays the same causing contraction, which raises pressure which increases temperature. How it works:

Hydrogen shell begins to burn rapidly (red layer in the diagram) and this causes the non-burning helium ‘ash’ (yellow layer) to expand. The core shrinks and heats up, the outer layers expand and cool. This is a red giant. How it works…

Star of less mass expands and glows red as it cools. Red Giant

In the core, helium begins fusing to make carbon. Temperatures are not high enough to make heavier elements. Helium flash: burning of helium becomes explosive and the outer layers of red giant are ejected in an envelope called a planetary nebula. Planetary Nebula

Outer layers of gas puff off. Hot core will be exposed as white dwarf. Planetary Nebula

Ring Nebula

Dumbbell Nebula

Hourglass Nebula

Ant Nebula

As the envelope recedes, the core becomes visible. White dwarf

Small, dim and hot. No nuclear reactions Dying star that is slowly cooling off White Dwarf

A nova is a white dwarf star that suddenly increases enormously in brightness, then slowly fades back to its original luminosity. Novea are the result of explosions on the surface of the star caused by matter falling onto their surfaces from the atmosphere of a larger binary companion. Nova

Type Ia Supernova

Star cools and reddens. White dwarf cooling

Eventually the white dwarf cools off completely and becomes a cold dense ball called a black dwarf because it does not radiate any energy. Black Dwarf

Star stops glowing. Black Dwarf

Flow chart: Nebula to white dwarf

Remember, low mass and massive stars for the same way up until the red giant phase. To be considered massive, a star must be about 8 times larger than our sun. Now lets talk about massive stars!

Chandrasekhar limit

Massive stars are hot enough to continue to fuse elements until the core becomes iron. Nuclear reactions in stars can’t make heavier elements than iron. Massive stars

Star of greater mass expands, cools, and turns red. Supergiant

Core releases an explosive shock wave expelling the outer layers of the star in a tremendous explosion called a type II supernova. Type II supernova

Supergiant explodes, blasting away outer layers. Supernova

Intense pressure in the core causes electrons to fuse with protons creating neutrons. After a supernova: option 1 = Neutron Star

Core collapses and becomes very dense. Neutron Star

Neutron stars are the densest visible object known. A teaspoon of our sun = 2.1 grams A teaspoon of a neutron star = 9.75x10 14 grams Sometimes Neutron stars pulse due to electrons accelerating near the magnetic poles and are called pulsars. Neutron stars

The gravitational pull is so great that nothing can escape it, not even light! After a supernova: option 2 = black hole

Singularity is the center of the black hole and a point of infinite density. The current laws of physics break down because the circumstances are so extreme. Blackholes

This is the radius at which the escape velocity equals the speed of light. The event horizon is the surface of the black hole and the ‘point of no return’. Schwarzschild radius and event horizon

Core collapses completely and vanishes Black hole

Flow chart: can you label the parts?