The birth of a star Chapter 11 1.Where are the birth places of stars? 2.What are the main components of a protostar? 3.When and how a new is born? 4.What.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Stellar Evolution. The Mass-Luminosity Relation Our goals for learning: How does a star’s mass affect nuclear fusion?
Advertisements

Chapter 17 Star Stuff.
George Observatory The Colorful Night Sky.
The Birth, Life and Death of Stars
Life Cycle of a Star Star Life Cycle: Stars are like humans. They are born, live and then die.
Stellar Evolution Describe how a protostar becomes a star.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Susan CartwrightOur Evolving Universe1 The Lives of Stars n From studying nearby stars and stellar clusters l most stars are on the main sequence l stars.
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.
Announcements Angel Grade update Friday April 2 Reading for next class: 17.4, chapter 18 Star Assignment 7, due Monday April 5 ÜDo Angel quiz, ÜAstronomy.
4 August 2005AST 2010: Chapter 211 Stars: From Adolescence to Old Age.
The Formation and Structure of Stars
Stellar Evolution The birth, Life and Death of stars
This set of slides This set of slides starts the topic of stellar evolution, overview, protostars, main sequence… Units covered: 59, 60, 61.
The Formation and Structure of Stars
Stellar Evolution Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 13.
Chapter 26 Part 1 of Section 2: Evolution of Stars
The formation of stars Learning Objective: How do stars form?
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.
The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.
PHYS 205 Powerhouse PHYS 205 Possible sources Chemical Energy: Sun has hydrogen and if it has oxygen, than we can make water. will last 18,000 years.
AST101 Lecture 13 The Lives of the Stars. A Tale of Two Forces: Pressure vs Gravity.
Pg. 12.  Mass governs a star’s properties  Energy is generated by nuclear fusion  Stars that aren’t on main sequence of H-R either have fusion from.
By CJ B. Star Life Cycle. Protostars Stars begin to form out of a nebula Nebulas are a giant cloud of dust and gas (about 97% hydrogen and 3% helium)
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.
Stellar Evolution: The Life Cycle of Stars Dense, dark clouds, possibly forming stars in the future Young stars, still in their birth nebulae Aging supergiant.
Structure of the Sun. The Core is where all the action is. The core is the only place in the Sun where the temperature (10 million K) and density are.
Stellar Structure Temperature, density and pressure decreasing Energy generation via nuclear fusion Energy transport via radiation Energy transport via.
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.
Intro screen.
Chapter 17 Star Stuff.
A Star Becomes a Star 1)Stellar lifetime 2)Red Giant 3)White Dwarf 4)Supernova 5)More massive stars October 28, 2002.
The Fundamental Problem in studying the stellar lifecycle
The Lives and Deaths of Stars
I'll give you a short answer and a longer one. The short answer is that towards the end of a star's life, the temperature near the core rises and this.
Ch Stellar Evolution. Nebula—a cloud of dust and gas. 70% Hydrogen, 28% Helium, 2% heavier elements. Gravity pulls the nebula together; it spins.
Chapter 12 Star Stuff Evolution of Low-Mass Stars 1. The Sun began its life like all stars as an intersteller cloud. 2. This cloud collapses due to.
A Note Taking Experience.
Life Cycle of Stars Birth Place of Stars:
Chapter 30 Section 2 Handout
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.
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.
Annoucements Go observing! Soon! The next exam is on Friday, October 8. –That is only 9 days from today.
Bell Ringer 10/13 Why do we celebrate Columbus Day?
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 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.
The Lives of Stars. Topics that will be on the test!! Apparent and Absolute Magnitude HR Diagram Stellar Formation and Lifetime Binary Stars Stellar Evolution.
The Formation of Stars. I. Making Stars from the Interstellar Medium A. Star Birth in Giant Molecular Clouds B. Heating By Contraction C. Protostars D.
The Life Cycle of Stars.
Stars Earth Science – Mr. Foster. Why do stars exist? Stars exist because of gravity Two opposing forces in a star are – Gravity – contracts – Thermal.
Unit 11: Stellar Evolution Mr. Ross Brown Brooklyn School for Law and Technology.
THE LIFE CYCLE OF A STAR Objective: I will compare and contrast the life cycle of stars based on their mass.
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.
Stellar Evolution. Structure Mass governs a star’s temperature, luminosity, and diameter Hydrostatic Equilibrium – the balance between gravity squeezing.
Stellar Evolution Life Cycle of stars.
Stellar Evolution.
Chapter 30 Section 2 Handout
Section 3: Stellar Evolution
Life Cycle of a Star Star Life Cycle: Stars are like humans. They are born, live and then die.
The lifecycles of stars
With thanks to Stellar Life Cycle With thanks to
25.2 – Stellar Evolution – Part I
Birth out of the interstellar medium Contraction to a normal
Stellar Evolution Chapter 30.2.
Presentation transcript:

The birth of a star Chapter 11 1.Where are the birth places of stars? 2.What are the main components of a protostar? 3.When and how a new is born? 4.What prevents a star from collapsing? Questions to be addressed:

How does a star form? A cloud of hydrogen gas began to gravitationally collapse. As more gas fell in, it’s potential energy was converted into thermal energy. Eventually the in-falling gas was hot enough to ignite nuclear fusion in the core. Gas that continued to fall in helped to establish gravitational equilibrium with the pressure generated in the core.

How can collapse occur? No collapse if thermal pressure wins over gravity When clouds too cold, pressure insufficient to balance gravity: collapse During collapse (compression) temperature increases: gravitational energy converted into thermal energy

Molecular cloud Cool molecular clouds gravitationally collapse to form clusters of stars Stars generate helium, carbon and iron through stellar nucleosynthesis The hottest, most massive stars in the cluster supernova – heavier elements are formed in the explosion. New (dirty) molecular clouds are left behind by the supernova debris. The Stellar Cycle

Proto-stellar disk crucial: It is where planets form

O

Stellar Evolution in a Nutshell Mass controls the evolution of a star! M < 8 M Sun M > 8 M Sun M core < 3M Sun M core > 3M Sun

A main sequence star is the one which is supported by hydrogen fusion

From cloud to protostar: gravity is the key for the collapse Initial cloud with some rotation Cloud spins up as it collapse A protostar

The structure of a protostar Herbig-Haro objects Dark band is the proto-stellar disk seen edge-on

From a protostar to a true star Gas is heated when it is compressed The central part of a protostar is compressed the most, and when the temperature there reaches 10 million K, hot enough to ignite hydrogen fusion, the collapse is halted by the heated generated by the nuclear reaction A new star is born, and its internal structure is stabilized, because the energy produced in the center matches the amount of radiation from the surface

A main-sequence star can hold its structure for a very long time. Why? Thermal Pressure Gravitational Contraction

4 1 H --> 4 He + energy ( E = mc 2 ) Two ways to do this fusion reaction: In the Sun, about 500 million tons/sec are needed! If M<1.1Mo: p-p chain If M>1.1 Mo: CNO cycle Energy output of p-p cycle depends mildly on T: 10% Dt  46% De 50% of energy in 11% of mass Energy output of CNO has steep dependence on T: 10% Dt  340% De 50% of energy in 2% of mass p-p cycle is a “direct way to fuse 4 H into 1 He CNO cycle needs the help of C, N and O (catalysts) C, N and O simply assist the reaction, but do not partecipate Final output is the same: 4 H fuse into 1 He

Balance happens thanks to flow (transport) of radiation from center (hotter) to surface (colder) Conduction, radiation, convection Opacity is key to efficiency of radiation transport p-p stars: radiative core, convective envelope CNO stars: convective core, radiative envelope Small stars (M<~0.4 Mo) all convective

Pressure and Temperature of a Gas

This balance between weight and pressure is called hydrostatic equilibrium. The Sun's core, for example, has a temperature of about 16 million K. How does a star hold itself?

Outward thermal pressure of core is larger than inward gravitational pressure Core expands Expanding core cools Nuclear fusion rate drops dramatically Outward thermal pressure of core drops (and becomes smaller than inward grav. pressure) Core contracts Contracting core heats up Nuclear fusion rate rises dramatically The Stellar Thermostat

Review Questions 1.Where are the birth places of stars? 2.What are the main components of a protostar? 3.When and how is a new star born? 4.What prevents a star from collapsing?

Why is there a Main Sequence? The Main Sequence is just a manifestation of the relationship between Mass and Luminosity: L ~ M 3.5 The more massive the star the larger its weight The larger the weight, the larger the pressure The larger the pressure, the higher the temperature The higher the temperature, the more energetic the nuclear reaction The more energetic the nuclear reactions, the more luminous the star Also, the more energetic the nuclear reactions, the faster the rate at which fusion occurs The faster the rate, the quicker the star burns its fuel, the shorter its life