Astro 1050 Wed. Mar. 2, 2005
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Today: Homework |
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Questionnaire results |
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Finish Ch. 8, Properties of Stars |
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Start Ch. 9, ISM (kicks butt!) |
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Questionnaire Results
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Math: Many are okay with it, large
minority say too much/too hard. Two
say too easy. |
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Resolution: more in-class examples
(slower), but less emphasis on test (still some problems though) |
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Best: probably lab, or the demos, but
no clear consensus |
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Worst: Either the math, unbroken long
stretches of powerpoint, or the exam, also lab/lecture out of synch |
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Resolution: See above, plus more effort
on my part to include variety with demos, movies, or other activities |
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Review Session: Overall positive, will
do more, and perhaps add review sheet/slides on-line |
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Other: Planetarium mentioned – we’ll
see about another chance after break.
Buzzing light? |
Eclipsing Binary Stars
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System seen “edge-on” |
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Stars pass in front of each other |
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Brightness drops when either is hidden |
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Used to measure: |
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size of stars (relative to orbit) |
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relative “surface brightness” |
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area hidden is same for both eclipses |
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drop bigger when hotter star hidden |
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tells us system is edge on |
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useful for spectroscopic binaries |
Masses and the HR Diagram
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Main Sequence position: |
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M:
0.5 MSun |
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G: 1 MSun |
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B:
40 Msun |
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Luminosity Class |
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Must be controlled by something else |
The Mass-Luminosity
Relationship
Starting Ch.9:
Interstellar Medium
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Since stars die, new ones must somehow
be born |
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They must be made out of material like
star: |
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H, He, plus a little heavier elements |
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Three types of interstellar “nebulae”
or clouds |
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Emission nebulae -- Glow with emission
lines |
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Reflection nebulae -- Reflect starlight |
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Dark nebulae -- seen in silhouette |
Emission nebulae
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The red glow is Hydrogen Balmer a (Ha ) emission |
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Could be from hot gas but – |
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relative strength of emission lines not
always right |
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Can also get fluorescence: |
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UV photon from bright star boosts
electron to high level (or ionizes it) |
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Emission lines created as electron
cascades back down through H energy levels |
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The “horse” is a dark cloud in front of
the glowing gas. |
Reflection nebulae – The
Pleiades
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Cluster of new stars |
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Visible to unaided eye
in western Taurus |
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Stars form in clusters – most of which
slowly spread apart. |
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Reflection nebula is reflected sunlight |
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Can see stellar-like spectra with
absorption lines |
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Blue light scattered more efficiently
than red |
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Pleiades didn’t form here – just moving
through this cloud of dust. |
Dark Nebula
Spectral Measurements
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Use spectra of stars |
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Ignore broad (“high pressure” stellar
lines |
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Very narrow (low pressure) lines from
interstellar gas |
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This one Ca II = Ca+1 |
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Stronger in more distant stars |
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Stronger when looking through
interstellar gas clouds |
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Hydrogen hard to measure |
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remember Balmer rules |
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Measurements at other
Wavelengths
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Infrared “Cirrus” |
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really slightly warm dust |
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X-Rays of hot gas near exploded stars
(supernova) |
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Radio observations of “Molecular
Clouds” |
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Called that because cool and dense
enough for molecules to form |
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H2 also hard to detect |
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CO common and easy to detect |
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Densest have 1000 atoms/cm3 |
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T as low as 10 K |
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Location of star formation |
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Collapse of
Molecular Clouds
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Barely stable against collapse: |
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Imagine slightly compressing cloud |
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Gravity goes up because material is
packed more tightly (R in 1/R2 is smaller) |
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Tends to make cloud want to collapse |
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Pressure goes up because material is
packed more tightly (P µ rT) and r higher |
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Tends to make cloud want to expand |
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For smaller clouds Pressure wins
(stable) |
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For larger clouds Gravity wins
(collapse) |
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As it collapses and becomes denser,
smaller and smaller parts become unstable |
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Shock wave can trigger collapse |
What will a forming star
look like in HR diagram?
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Temperature changes relatively simple |
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Starts out large and relatively
cool Must be on red side of diagram |
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It heats up as it contracts Must
towards the blue |
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Luminosity more complicated because it
depends on T and R |
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Not much energy to start
with Luminosity must start out low |
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Collapse releases grav.
energy Luminosity will rise |
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Fusion begins, releases more
energy Luminosity at a peak |
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Collapse slows, only have fusion
now Luminosity declines |
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Finally stabilizes on the main sequence |
How does mass affect
collapse?
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More massive protostars have stronger
gravity |
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Collapse speed will be much faster |
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Fast collapse and short lifetime means
massive stars reach end of lifetime while low mass stars in cloud are just
forming |
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Supernova shocks may come from earlier
generation of stars |
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Sequential Star Formation |
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Energy from supernova and other effects
eventually disrupts cloud – prevents further collapse. |
Observations of collapse
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Young cluster “NGC 2264” |
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Few million years old |
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High mass stars have reached
main sequence |
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Lower mass stars are still approaching
main sequence |
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T Tauri stars |
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Naming of classes of stars: Usually named after first star in
class: T Tauri |
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Stars with letters (RR Lyrae) are
typically “variable” stars |
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Earlier stages hidden by dust |
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More details of stellar
structure and energy generation
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Alternatives to the proton-proton chain |
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Fusion of Helium to heavier elements |
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Proton-proton reaction slow because: |
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Need two rare events at once |
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High energy collision of 2 protons |
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Conversion of p Ţn during
collision |
The CNO Cycle
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Gives way around need for p ®n during the collision |
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Still must happen later – but don’t
need to rare events simultaneously |
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Trade off is need for higher energy
collisions (T>16 million K) |
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Add p to some nucleus where new one is
still “stable” |
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Wait for p ® n while that nucleus just
“sits around” |
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The net effect is still 4 1H
® 4He |
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C just acts like a “catalyst” |
Heavy Element Fusion
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Triple Alpha process |
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4He + 4He ® 8Be + g |
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8Be + 4He ® 12C + g |
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Similar type reactions
create heavy elements above 600 Million K |
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Plot to left gives: |
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x:
# of neutrons |
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y:
# of protons |
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Right one – add neutron |
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Up
one – add proton |
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Diagonal – p ® n or reverse |
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Jumps: add 4He or more |
Models of Stellar
Structure
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Divide star into thin shells,calculate
how following vary from shell to shell (i.e. as function of radius r) |
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P (Pressure) |
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T (Temperature) |
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r (Density) |
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To do this also need to find: |
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M (Mass) contained within any r |
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L (Luminosity) generated within any r |
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P example: |
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Numerical Stellar Models
Why don’t stars collapse?
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Star is “almost” in hydrostatic
equilibrium |
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Star radiates energy: If nothing else happened T would drop, P
would drop, star would shrink. |
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Star does shrink, but in doing so
gravitational energy is converted to heat, preventing T from continuing to
drop. |
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In fact, since star is now more
compact, gravity is stronger and it actually needs higher P (so higher T) to
prevent catastrophic collapse |
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As star shrinks, ˝ of gravitational
energy goes into heating up star, ˝ gets radiated away |
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Rate at which it radiates energy, so
rate at which it shrinks, is limited by how “insulating” intermediate layers
are |
Why do we get steady
fusion rates?
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Star continues to shrink till it gets
hot enough inside for fusion (rather than gravity) to balance energy being
radiated away. |
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Nuclear thermostat |
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If fusion reactions took place in a
“box” with fixed walls: |
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Fusion Ţ more energy Ţhigher T Ţ more fusion
(explosion) |
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If fusion reactions take place in sun
with “soft gravity walls”: |
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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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Mass-Luminosity
relationship
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L µ M3.5 Why? |
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Higher mass means higher internal
pressure |
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Higher pressure goes with higher
temperature |
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Higher temperature means heat leaks out
faster |
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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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Lifetime on Main Sequence
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L µ M3.5 T
µ
fuel / L = M/M3.5 = M-2.5 |
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Example: M=2 MSun L = 11.3 LSun T =1/5.7 TSun |
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How about a 0.5 solar
mass star?
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M = 0.5 Msun |
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Time = |
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Luminosity = |
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How about a 0.5 solar
mass star?
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M = 0.5 Msun |
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Time = 5.7 times solar lifetime |
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Luminosity = 0.09 solar luminosity |
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Width of Main Sequence –
and Stellar Aging
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As star converts H to He you have more
massive nuclei |
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Pressure related to number of nuclei |
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Gravity related to mass of nuclei |
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Pressure would tend to drop unless
something else happens |
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Temperature must rise (slightly) to
compensate |
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Luminosity must
rise (slightly) as heat leaks out faster |
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Orion Nebula: A
Star-Forming Region
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Red light = Hydrogen emission |
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Blue light = reflection nebula |
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Dark lanes = dust |
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Astronomy Picture of the Day:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod |
Protoplanetary Disks in
the Orion Nebula
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Dusty disk seen in silhouette |
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Central star visible at long
wavelengths |
Herbig-Haro objects: The
angular momentum problem
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As clouds try to collapse angular
momentum makes them spin faster |
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A disk forms around the protostar |
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Material is ejected along the rotation
axis |
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Herbig-Haro 34 in Orion
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Jet along the axis visible as red |
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Lobes at each end where jets run into
surrounding gas clouds |
Motion of Herbig-Haro 34
in Orion
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Can actually see the knots in the jet
move with time |
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In time jets, UV photons, supernova,
will disrupt the stellar nursery |