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- Today: Extra Credit Articles
- Homework
- Chapter 8, Properties of Stars
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- Q1 At what wavelength does the spectrum of a 10000 K type A star
peak?
Use Wien’s Law: λ = 3000000 nm/T, so 300 nm.
- Q2 The neutral atom of the most common form of hydrogen consists of a
proton and an electron.
- Q3 Fusion of very light elements to make heavier ones releases energy,
as does fission of very heavy elements to make lighter ones. The most
"energetically favorable" and stable element from which
neither fission nor fusion can release energy is IRON
- Q5 In the two page spread you can find the solar flare energy in terms
of nuclear weapons (up to a billion H-bombs), and determine that yes, the
traitor dies like the dog he is!
- Q6 1 kg of mass transformed into energy:
- E = mc2 so E=1 kg x (3x108m/s)2 = 9x1016
J
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- Q7 1 kg of H fused into He.
How much energy is liberated? Use E = mc2, but
must determine how much mass is converted. We learned in class that 4.3 ´ 10-12
J released for each He produced.
He masses 6.645 ´ 10-27 kg, so we have 1.5x1026
He in a kg, each producing the above energy. Multiply the energy per He times
number of He = 1.5x1026 x 4.3 ´ 10-12 J = 6.4x1014 J
- Q9 Sunspot brightness, use E = σT4
- (T1/T2)4 = (5800/4200)4 = 3.6 times brighter
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- Two types of binary stars
- Visual binaries: See separate stars
- a large, P long
- Can’t directly measure component of a along line of sight
- Spectroscopic binaries: See
Doppler shifts in spectra
- a small, P short
- Can’t directly measure component of a in plane of sky
- If star is visual and spectroscopic binary get get full set of
information and then get M
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- Main Sequence position:
- M: 0.5 MSun
- G:
1 MSun
- B:
40 Msun
- Luminosity Class
- Must be controlled by something else
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- System seen “edge-on”
- Stars pass in front of each other
- Brightness drops when either is hidden
- Used to measure:
- size of stars (relative to orbit)
- relative “surface brightness”
- area hidden is same for both eclipses
- drop bigger when hotter star hidden
- tells us system is edge on
- useful for spectroscopic binaries
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- Since stars die, new ones must somehow be born
- They must be made out of material like star:
- H, He, plus a little heavier elements
- Three types of interstellar “nebulae” or clouds
- Emission nebulae -- Glow with emission lines
- Reflection nebulae -- Reflect starlight
- Dark nebulae -- seen in silhouette
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- The red glow is Hydrogen Balmer a
(Ha
) emission
- Could be from hot gas but –
- relative strength of emission lines not always right
- Can also get fluorescence:
- UV photon from bright star boosts electron to high level (or ionizes
it)
- Emission lines created as electron cascades back down through H energy
levels
- The “horse” is a dark cloud in front of the glowing gas.
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- Cluster of new stars
- Visible to unaided eye
in western Taurus
- Stars form in clusters – most of which slowly spread apart.
- Reflection nebula is reflected sunlight
- Can see stellar-like spectra with absorption lines
- Blue light scattered more efficiently than red
- Pleiades didn’t form here – just moving through this cloud
of dust.
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- Use spectra of stars
- Ignore broad (“high pressure” stellar lines
- Very narrow (low pressure) lines from interstellar gas
- Stronger in more distant stars
- Stronger when looking through interstellar gas clouds
- Hydrogen hard to measure
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- Infrared “Cirrus”
- really slightly warm dust
- X-Rays of hot gas near exploded stars (supernova)
- Radio observations of “Molecular Clouds”
- Called that because cool and dense enough for molecules to form
- H2 also hard to detect
- CO common and easy to detect
- Densest have 1000 atoms/cm3
- T as low as 10 K
- Location of star formation
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- Barely stable against collapse:
- Imagine slightly compressing cloud
- Gravity goes up because material is packed more tightly (R in 1/R2
is smaller)
- Tends to make cloud want to collapse
- Pressure goes up because material is packed more tightly (P µ rT) and r higher
- Tends to make cloud want to expand
- For smaller clouds Pressure wins (stable)
- For larger clouds Gravity wins (collapse)
- As it collapses and becomes denser, smaller and smaller parts become
unstable
- Shock wave can trigger collapse
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- Temperature changes relatively simple
- Starts out large and relatively cool Must be on red side of diagram
- It heats up as it contracts Must towards the blue
- Luminosity more complicated because it depends on T and R
- Not much energy to start with Luminosity must start out low
- Collapse releases grav. energy Luminosity will rise
- Fusion begins, releases more energy Luminosity at a peak
- Collapse slows, only have fusion now Luminosity declines
- Finally stabilizes on the main sequence
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- More massive protostars have stronger gravity
- Collapse speed will be much faster
- Fast collapse and short lifetime means massive stars reach end of
lifetime while low mass stars in cloud are just forming
- Supernova shocks may come from earlier generation of stars
- Sequential Star Formation
- Energy from supernova and other effects eventually disrupts cloud
– prevents further collapse.
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- Young cluster “NGC 2264”
- High mass stars have reached
main sequence
- Lower mass stars are still approaching main sequence
- Naming of classes of stars:
Usually named after first star in class: T Tauri
- Stars with letters (RR Lyrae) are typically “variable”
stars
- Earlier stages hidden by dust
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- Alternatives to the proton-proton chain
- Fusion of Helium to heavier elements
- Proton-proton reaction slow because:
- Need two rare events at once
- High energy collision of 2 protons
- Conversion of p Þn during collision
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- Gives way around need for p ®n during the collision
- Still must happen later – but don’t need to rare events simultaneously
- Trade off is need for higher energy collisions (T>16 million K)
- Add p to some nucleus where new one is still “stable”
- Wait for p ® n
while that nucleus just “sits around”
- The net effect is still
4 1H ® 4He
- C just acts like a “catalyst”
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- Triple Alpha process
- 4He + 4He ® 8Be + g
- 8Be + 4He ® 12C + g
- Similar type reactions create heavy
elements above 600 Million K
- Plot to left gives:
- x: # of neutrons
- y: # of protons
- Right one – add neutron
- Up one
– add proton
- Diagonal – p ® n or reverse
- Jumps:
add 4He or more
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- Divide star into thin shells,calculate how following vary from shell to
shell
(i.e. as function of
radius r)
- P (Pressure)
- T (Temperature)
- r (Density)
- To do this also need to find:
- M (Mass) contained within any r
- L (Luminosity) generated within any r
- P example:
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- Limiting case: Assume no
nuclear fusion so only energy source is gravity.
- Star is “almost” in hydrostatic equilibrium
- Star radiates energy: If
nothing else happened T would drop, P would drop, star would shrink.
- Star does shrink, but in doing so gravitational energy is converted to
heat, preventing T from continuing to drop.
- In fact, since star is now more compact, gravity is stronger and it
actually needs higher P (so higher T) to prevent catastrophic collapse
- As star shrinks, ½ of gravitational energy goes into heating up
star, ½ gets radiated away
- Rate at which it radiates energy, so rate at which it shrinks, is
limited by how “insulating” intermediate layers are
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- Strange counterintuitive result:
- As star radiates away thermal energy it actually heats up
(because as it shrinks gravity supplies even more energy)
- Star continues to shrink till it gets hot enough inside for fusion
(rather than gravity) to balance energy being radiated away.
- Nuclear thermostat
- If fusion reactions took place in a “box” with fixed walls:
- Fusion Þ
more energy Þhigher T Þ more fusion (explosion)
- If fusion reactions take place in sun with “soft gravity
walls”:
- If fusion rate is too high T tries to go up but star expands and
actually ends up cooling off – slowing down fusion. (steady rate)
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- L µ M3.5 Why?
- Higher mass means higher internal pressure
- Higher pressure goes with higher temperature
- Higher temperature means heat leaks out faster
- Star shrinks until T inside is high enough for
fusion rate (which is very sensitive to temperature)
to balance heat leak rate
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- L µ M3.5 T
µ
fuel / L = M/M3.5 = M-2.5
- Example: M=2 MSun L = 11.3
LSun
T =1/5.7 TSun
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- M = 0.5 Msun
- Time =
- Luminosity =
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- M = 0.5 Msun
- Time = 5.7 times solar lifetime
- Luminosity = 0.09 solar luminosity
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- As star converts H to He you have more massive nuclei
- Pressure related to number of nuclei
- Gravity related to mass of nuclei
- Pressure would tend to drop unless something else happens
- Temperature must rise (slightly) to compensate
- Luminosity must rise (slightly) as heat leaks out
faster
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- Red light = Hydrogen emission
- Blue light = reflection nebula
- Dark lanes = dust
- Astronomy Picture of the Day:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod
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- Dusty disk seen in silhouette
- Central star visible at long wavelengths
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- As clouds try to collapse angular momentum makes them spin faster
- A disk forms around the protostar
- Material is ejected along the rotation axis
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- Jet along the axis visible as red
- Lobes at each end where jets run into surrounding gas clouds
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- Can actually see the knots in the jet move with time
- In time jets, UV photons, supernova, will disrupt the stellar nursery
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