Astro 1050     Mon. Mar. 8, 2004
   Today: End Ch. 10: The Deaths of Stars
Start Ch. 11: Neutron Stars, Black Holes

Is a star stable against catastrophic collapse?
Imagine compressing a star slightly (without removing energy)
Pressure goes up (trying to make star expand)
Gravity also goes up (trying to make star collapse)
Does pressure go up faster than gravity?
If Yes:  star is stable – it bounces back to original size
If No:   star is unstable – gravity makes it collapses
Ordinary gas: P does go up fast –  stable
Non-relativistic degenerate gas:   P does go up fast –  stable
Relativistic degenerate gas: P does not go up fast –  unstable
Relativistic:   Mean are the electrons moving at close to the speed of light
Non-relativistic degenerate gas:   increasing r means not only more electrons, but faster electrons, which raises pressure a lot.
Relativistic degenerate gas:   increasing r can’t increase electron velocity (they are already going close to speed of light) so pressure doesn’t go up as much

Chandrasekhar Limit for White Dwarfs
Add mass to an existing white dwarf
Pressure (P) must increase to balance stronger gravity
For degenerate matter, P depends only on density (r), not temperature, so must have higher density
P vs. r rule such that higher mass star must actually have smaller radius to provide enough P
As Mstar ® 1.4 MSun      velectron ® c
Requires much higher r to provide high enough P, so star must be much smaller.
Strong gravity which goes with higher r makes this a losing game.
For M ł 1.4 MSun no increase in r can provide enough increase in P – star collapses

Implications for Stars
Stars less massive than 1.4 MSun can end as white dwarfs
Stars more massive than 1.4 MSun can end as white dwarfs, if they lose enough of their mass (during PN stage) that they end up with less than 1.4 MSun
Stars whose degenerate cores grow more massive than 1.4 MSun will undergo a catastrophic core collapse:
Neutron stars
Supernova

Supernova
When the degenerate core of a star exceeds 1.4 MSun it collapses
Type II:  Massive star runs out of fuel after converting core to Fe
Type  I:  White dwarf in binary, which receives mass from its companion (collapse ignites carbon burning).
Events:
Star’s core begins to collapse
Huge amounts of gravitational energy liberated
Extreme densities allows weak force to convert matter to neutrons
p+ + e-
®  n + n
Neutrinos (n) escape, carrying away much of energy, aiding collapse
Collapsing outer part is heated, “bounces” off core, is ejected into space
Light from very hot ejected matter makes supernova very bright
Ejected matter contains heavy elements from fusion and neutron capture
Core collapses into either:
Neutron stars or Black Holes (Chapter 11)

Supernova in Another Galaxy
Supernova 1994D in NGC 4526

Tycho’s Supernova of 1572
Now seen by the Chandra X-ray Observatory as an expanding cloud.

The Crab Nebula – Supernova from 1050 AD
Can see expansion between 1973 and 2001
Kitt Peak National Observatory Images

Chapter 11: Neutron Stars and Black Holes
What happens to the collapsing core?
Neutron star
Quantum rules also resist neutron packing
Densities much higher than white dwarfs allowed
R ~ 5 km      r ~ 1014 gm/cm3   (similar to nucleus)
M limit uncertain,  ~2 or ~3 MSun before it collapses
Spins very fast (by conservation of angular momentum)
Trapped spinning magnetic field makes it:
Act like a “lighthouse” beaming out E-M radiation (radio, light)
pulsars
Accelerates nearby charged particles

Spinning pulsar powers the
 Crab nebula
Red:  Ha
Blue:  “Synchrotron” emission from high speed electrons trapped in magnetic field

Another pic of the Crab, Pulsar

Why a “pulsar?”

“Lighthouse” Model for Pulsars

Another Neutron Star in a SNR

Other cool stuff about Neutron Stars
Novel Dragon’s Egg by Robert L. Forward
Short Story “Neutron Star” by Larry Niven
Binary Pulsars
Gamma Ray Bursts?
Pulsar Planets

Black Holes -- basics
Nothing can stop collapse after neutron pressure fails
Escape velocity from a surface at radius R:
As R shrinks (but M is fixed), Vescape gets larger and larger
At some point VEscape= c  (speed of light)
Happens at Schwarzschild radius:
Not even light can escape from within this radius

Examples:
The Schwarzschild Radius:
Mass in solar masses Rs (km)
10
3
2
1
0.000003 (Earth)

Examples:
The Schwarzschild Radius:
Mass in solar masses Rs (km)
10 30
3 9
2 6
1 3
0.000003 (Earth) 0.9 cm

Black Holes -- details
Remember – gravity is same as before, away from mass
Black holes do NOT necessarily pull all nearby material in
A planet orbiting a new black hole would just keep on orbiting as before (assuming the ejected material or radiated energy didn’t have an effect)
Any mass can potentially be made into a black hole – if you can compress it to a size smaller than RS = 2GM/c2
1 MSun: 3.0 km        106 MSun 3´106 km         1 MEarth 8.9 mm

Black Holes -- details
If you do make material fall into a black hole, material will be falling at close to the speed of light when it reaches RS
If that falling gas collides with and heats other gas before it reaches RS, then light from that hot material (outside RS) can escape (important in quasars!).

Black Holes – detection
By definition – can’t see light from black hole itself
Can see large amounts of energy released by falling material just before it crosses RS
Can see motion of nearby objects caused by gravity of black hole

Black Holes – detection
Example: Like White Dwarf accretion disk but w/ black hole instead
Gas from red giant companion spills over towards black hole
Gas spirals in toward black hole, through accretion disk
Gas will be much hotter because it falls further, to very small RS
Gas will be moving at very high velocity
Much faster than with white dwarf since much closer  (P2 µ a3)
Signature of black hole:  Very high energy release, very high velocity
We find MASSIVE black holes in centers of most galaxies

Cygnus X-1

More Cool Stuff About Black Holes
Time Dilation – originally “Frozen Stars”
Gravitational Redshift
Wicked Tidal Forces
Hawking Radiation