Survey of the Universe Tom Burbine

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Notes 30.2 Stellar Evolution
Advertisements

White Dwarf Stars Low mass stars are unable to reach high enough temperatures to ignite elements heavier than carbon in their core become white dwarfs.
Susan CartwrightOur Evolving Universe1 The Deaths of Stars n What happens to stars when the helium runs out? l l do they simply fade into oblivion? l l.
1 Stellar Remnants White Dwarfs, Neutron Stars & Black Holes These objects normally emit light only due to their very high temperatures. Normally nuclear.
Lecture 26: The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard: White Dwarfs and Neutron Stars.
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.
Life Cycle of a Star Star Life Cycle: Stars are like humans. They are born, live and then die.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard.
Fill in the chart when you see a yellow star. Take notes on the stars and events as well.
The Life Cycle of a Star.
Stellar Deaths II Neutron Stars and Black Holes 17.
Slide 1 Stellar Evolution M ~4 P R O T O S T A R M a i n S e q u e n c e D G I A N T Planetary Supernova Nebula W h i t e D w a r f B r o w n D w a r f.
Neutron Stars and Black Holes
Stellar Evolution. Basic Structure of Stars Mass and composition of stars determine nearly all of the other properties of stars Mass and composition of.
Stellar Nucleosynthesis
Earth Science 25.2B : Stellar Evolution
The Evolution of Stars. After birth, newborn stars are very large, so they are very bright. Gravity causes them to contract, and they become fainter because.
13 Black Holes and Neutron Stars Dead Stars Copyright – A. Hobart.
This set of slides This set of slides covers the supernova of white dwarf stars and the late-in-life evolution and death of massive stars, stars > 8 solar.
Black Holes! And other collapsed stars
The Stellar Graveyard.
Question The pressure that prevents the gravitational collapse of white dwarfs is a result of ______.  A) Conservation of energy  B) Conservation of.
Chapter 12: Stellar Evolution Stars more massive than the Sun The evolution of all stars is basically the same in the beginning. Hydrogen burning leads.
Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine
Compact Objects Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 15 “How will we see when the sun goes dark?” “We will be forced to grope and feel our way.”
Mike Chris. Stars begin as a nebula, or clouds scattered dust made mostly of hydrogen As the nebula collapses the contents of it begin to to heat up.
Conversations with the Earth Tom Burbine
Lives of stars.
Mrs. Degl1 All about the Stars Click here Click here for the Astronomy picture of the day!!! The distances to stars are very large so astronomers use light.
Earth Science Notes Stars and Galaxies.
SOLAR SYSTEM AND STAR FORMATION. Solar System and Star Formation  Both happen at the same time, but we’ll look at the two events separately.
Survey of the Universe Tom Burbine
1 Stellar Remnants White Dwarfs, Neutron Stars & Black Holes These objects normally emit light only due to their very high temperatures. Normally nuclear.
Stellar Evolution. Clouds of gas and dust are floating around in space These are called “nebula”
Remnant of a Type II supernova explosion Iron core collapses until neutrons are squeezed tightly together During the explosion core remains intact, outer.
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.
Survey of the Universe Tom Burbine
High Mass Stellar Evolution Astrophysics Lesson 13.
The Life Cycle of a Star The Horsehead Nebula – one of the most famous pictures in astronomy.
Stars. A Star is an object that produces energy at its core! A mass of plasma held together by its own gravity; Energy is released as electromagnetic.
Life Cycle of Stars Nebula hundreds of light years in size contract under gravity
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.
Life Cycle of a Star Star Life Cycle: Stars are like humans. They are born, live and then die.
The First Stage To A Star - Nebula A stars life is like a human, it begins almost as a fetus, then infant, adult, middle-aged, and then death. The first.
Galaxies The basic structural unit of matter in the universe is the galaxy A galaxy is a collection of billions of _____________, gas, and dust held together.
Unit 1 Lesson 3 The Life Cycle of Stars
Death of sun-like Massive star death Elemental my dear Watson Novas Neutron Stars Black holes $ 200 $ 200$200 $ 200 $ 200 $400 $ 400$400 $ 400$400.
Neutron Stars & Black Holes (Chapter 11) APOD. Student Learning Objective Indentify properties of Neutron Stars & Black Holes NASA.
Life Cycle of Stars Mr. Weaver.
Introduction to Physical Science Monday, Wednesday, Thursday Tom Burbine
White dwarfs cool off and grow dimmer with time. The White Dwarf Limit A white dwarf cannot be more massive than 1.4M Sun, the white dwarf limit (or Chandrasekhar.
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.
Astronomy 101 The Solar System Tuesday, Thursday Tom Burbine
E5 stellar processes and stellar evolution (HL only)
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard.
Novae and Supernovae - Nova (means new) – A star that dramatically increases in brightness in a short period of time. It can increase by a factor of 10,000.
Stars. Nebulae A nebula is a cloud of dust, hydrogen gas and plasma. The material clumps together to form a protostar. This is the first stage in the.
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.
Stellar Evolution Continued…. White Dwarfs Most of the fuel for fusion is used up Giant collapses because core can’t support weight of outer layers any.
Supernovas Neutron Stars and Black Holes
The Fate of High-Mass Stars
Stellar Evolution Chapters 16, 17 & 18.
Earth Science 25.2B : 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
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.
Evolution of the Solar System
Death of Stars (for high mass stars)
Presentation transcript:

Survey of the Universe Tom Burbine

Next Quiz This Wednesday Quiz includes material covered up to and including April 8 th Cumulative You can bring in one 8 ½ by 11 inch piece of paper with anything written on it

If you are unhappy with any of your grades: You can write a 10 page paper on an astronomical subject to replace it 12 point font Times New Roman font Double space No figures or plots Due by May 1st

Type Ia Supernova Lightcurve

Type Ia Supernova are consistent with coming from exploding white dwarfs No signs of hydrogen in their spectra, consistent a star that have lost their outer atmospheres of hydrogen in a stellar wind Lightcurve matches theoretical predictions of exploding white dwarfs

Last Type Ia supernovas that occurred in our galaxy were observed by Tycho Brahe (1572) and Johannes Kepler (1604)

Standard Candles Type Ia supernovas make excellent standard candles because they have identical maximum luminosities Their collapse and explosion occur the same way each time

Products Type Ia Supernovas are rich in elements such as carbon, oxygen, silicon, and iron Magnetic fields in the expanding remnant can accelerate atomic nuclei to speed close to the speed of light, which are called cosmic rays

Massive Stars Greater than 8 Solar Masses Begins life on main sequence as Blue Star Follows the same path as a low mass star but everything occurs faster

Fate of Massive Stars

Light Curves of supernovae of stars undergoing core collapse Dashed red line is Type Ia supernova

How do you get a Core-Collapse Supernova? A high-mass star keeps on fusing elements into ones with larger atomic masses Is now a Red Supergiant Energy keeps on being released since the mass of the new nucleus is less than the original ones

This stops with Iron Fusion of Iron with another element does not release energy Fission of Iron with another element does not release energy So you keep on making Iron

Initially Gravity keeps on pulling the core together The core keeps on shrinking Electron degeneracy keeps the core together for awhile

Then The iron core becomes too massive and collapses The iron core becomes neutrons when protons and electrons fuse together

Type I are classified based on the lack of hydrogen lines in their spectra –Type Ia are due to collapsing white dwarfs –Type Ib and Ic are due to collapsing cores of stars that have lost their hydrogen atmospheres Type II have hydrogen lines in their spectra –Due to collapsing cores

Type Ia Supernova Type II Supernova

Supernova 1987A that exploded in Large Magellanic Cloud (a small, nearby galaxy) 168,000 light-years away Could be seen with naked eye peak magnitude

Type II Supernova remnants of different ages Cassiopeia A 300 years old Crab Nebula 1,000 years old Supernova Several thousand years old

Type II Supernova explosion

Hypernova explosion - Hypothetical supernova explosion of a star so massive that its core collapses directly into a black hole

Neutron Star Neutron stars are usually ~10 kilometers across But more massive than the Sun Made almost entirely of neutrons Electrons and protons have fused together

How do you make a neutron star? Remnant of a Supernova

How do we know there are neutron stars? The identification of Pulsars Pulsars give out pulses of radio waves at precise intervals

Pulsars Pulsars were found at the center of supernovae remnants Fastest pulsars are called millisecond pulsars

Pulsars Pulsars were interpreted as rotating neutron stars Only neutron stars could rotate that fast Strong magnetic fields can beam radiation out

Conservation of Angular Momentum (M x V x R) If Radius shrinks, Rotation Velocity must increase

X-ray pulsars – generate pulses of X-ray radiation Magnetars – neutron stars with extremely intense magnetic fields that generate intense bursts of X- ray and gamma-ray radiation

Black Hole A black hole is a region where nothing can escape, even light.

Black Hole After a supernova if all the outer mass of the star is not blown off The mass falls back on the neutron star The gravity causes the neutron star to keep contracting

Event Horizon Event Horizon is the boundary between the inside and outside of the Black Hole Within the Event Horizon, the escape velocity is greater than the speed of light Nothing can escape once it enters the Event Horizon

How do calculate the radius of the Event Horizon? It is called the Schwarzschild Radius Radius = 2GM/c 2 This is a variation of the escape velocity formula Escape velocity = square root (2GM planet /R planet )

Black Hole Sizes A Black Hole with the mass of the Earth would have a radius of ~0.009 meters A Black Hole with the mass of the Sun would have a radius of ~3 kilometers

Anything with mass curves space

Can you see a Black Hole?

No Black Holes do not emit any light So you must see them indirectly You need to see the effects of their gravity

Accretion disk – flat disk of gas or other material held in orbit around a body before it falls onto the body

Evidence The white area is the core of a Galaxy Inside the core there is a brown spiral- shaped disk. It weighs a hundred thousand times as much as our Sun.

Evidence Because it is rotating we can measure its radii and speed, and hence determine its mass. This object is about as large as our solar system, but weighs 1,200,000,000 times as much as our sun. Gravity is about one million times as strong as on the sun. Almost certainly this object is a black hole.

big-black-hole/ big-black-hole/

Any Questions?