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Astronomy 1020 Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-33.

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Presentation on theme: "Astronomy 1020 Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-33."— Presentation transcript:

1 Astronomy 1020 Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-33

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3 Course Announcements 1 Dark night observing session left: Thurs. Apr. 16 Alternative exercise is posted. Reports are due Wed. Apr. 22 Fri. 17 th : 1-5pm in MUC – Research & Creative Forum LABS: This Week: Eclipsing Binaries Next Week: Hubble Red Shift “On your own”: Galaxy Zoo Classification Due: Wed. 29 th at class time (NO late labs accepted)

4 Evolutionary Tracks  Protostars get less luminous (for lower masses), smaller in radius, and hotter.  The star moves on the Hayashi track and arrives on the main sequence.

5 The more massive the protostar, the more rapidly it evolves

6 Concept Quiz Evolutionary Tracks Once fusion begins, a star moves to the left on the H-R diagram. Its luminosity does not change, but its temperature rises. The star is: A. Expanding. B. Contracting. C. Staying at the same radius. D. Can’t tell from the information given.

7  Many or all protostars have material leaving in a bipolar outflow of jets.  Infalling and outflowing gas can be very complex.

8 Bipolar Outflows  Powerful jets can collide with the interstellar medium to make Herbig-Haro (HH) objects.  These can eject much of the mass that would otherwise land on the star.

9  Star formation can make star clusters.  These are gravitationally bound groups of stars.  Clusters are good laboratories for testing our ideas of star formation and evolution.

10  Star formation may take millions of years.  Some stars are more massive; others less so.  Higher-mass stars take less time forming and evolving.

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13 Star Clusters All stars are: - same age - same composition -same distance Only difference: -mass

14  New investigative methods can reveal misunderstandings.  Astronomers did not realize the presence and effect of gas and dust on starlight until spectroscopy was developed and applied. PROCESS OF SCIENCE

15  A brown dwarf is not a star, nor a planet, but is in between.  Classified as L, T, or Y (cooler than M stars).  Glow in the infrared due to internal heat from gravitational contraction.  Over 1,000 have been found since the mid- 1990s. CONNECTIONS 15.1

16  Stars are constantly radiating energy.  The energy available from fusion is very large, but finite.  Eventually, the fusion sources change, then run out.

17  The star’s luminosity, size, or temperature will change.  A star’s life depends on mass and composition.  Stars of different masses evolve differently.

18  The rates and types of fusion depend on the star’s mass.  Generally, stars with M < 3 M  share many characteristics: low-mass stars.  Intermediate-mass stars: 3 M  < M < 8 M   High-mass stars: M > 8 M 

19  Higher temperature and pressure means faster nuclear fusion.  We can figure out main-sequence lifetimes: lifetime = (energy available) / (rate used).

20  More mass = more fuel available.  Rate energy used = luminosity.  More massive stars have much higher luminosity.  They use their fuel up more quickly and leave the MS faster.

21  Estimates can be made of star lifetimes, based on mass.  The mass-luminosity relationship:  The lifetime of a star depends on the amount of fuel (M) and how quickly it is used (L).  Can use this to compare other stars to the Sun: MATH TOOLS 16.1

22  Main-sequence stars fuse hydrogen to helium in their cores.  Eventually, much of the core H is converted to He.  A core of He ash is built up (does not fuse at this point).

23 Helium Core Is Degenerate  H fusion only takes place in a shell around the 100 percent He core: hydrogen shell burning.  If H fusion is not happening in the core, the star is no longer main sequence.  Since the He is not fusing, gravity begins to win over the pressure, crushing the He.  The core becomes more dense, and becomes electron-degenerate.  This means pressure is not from moving atoms, but from a quantum mechanical effect: There’s a limit to how tightly electrons can be packed together.


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