NSCI 314 LIFE IN THE COSMOS

Similar documents
They developed a graph, called the H-R diagram, that relates the temperature of a star to its absolute magnitude.

Star Formation A cloud of gas and dust, called a nebula, begins spinning & heating up. Eventually, it gets hot enough for fusion to take place, and a

ASTRONOMY 1 EXAM 3 a Name

What is a star? A body of gases that gives off tremendous amounts of energy in the form of light & heat. What star is closest to the earth?

8/30/2010. Classifying Stars. Classifying Stars. Classifying Stars

LIFE CYCLE OF A STAR

Chapter 33 The History of a Star. Introduction. Radio telescopes allow us to look into the center of the galaxy. The milky way

The Night Sky. The Universe. The Celestial Sphere. Stars. Chapter 14

1 A Solar System Is Born

Ch. 29 The Stars Stellar Evolution

LIFE CYCLE OF A STAR

Stars and Galaxies. Evolution of Stars

Stellar Evolution Notes

Beyond the Solar System 2006 Oct 17 Page 1 of 5

Beyond Our Solar System Chapter 24

Explain how the sun converts matter into energy in its core. Describe the three layers of the sun s atmosphere.

Review: HR Diagram. Label A, B, C respectively

Stars and Galaxies. Content Outline for Teaching

Earth Science, 13e Tarbuck & Lutgens

Stars. The composition of the star It s temperature It s lifespan

To infinity, and beyond!

Phys 100 Astronomy (Dr. Ilias Fernini) Review Questions for Chapter 9

Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Announcements. Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Lecture Outline. HW#7 due Friday by 5 pm! (available Tuesday)

*Generally speaking, there are two main life cycles for stars. *The factor which determines the life cycle of the star is its mass.

Cosmology, Galaxies, and Stars OUR VISIBLE UNIVERSE

A star is a massive sphere of gases with a core like a thermonuclear reactor. They are the most common celestial bodies in the universe are stars.

Birth & Death of Stars

Stars & Galaxies. Chapter 27, Section 1. Composition & Temperature. Chapter 27 Modern Earth Science Characteristics of Stars

Stellar Astronomy Sample Questions for Exam 4

Stars & Galaxies. Chapter 27 Modern Earth Science

the nature of the universe, galaxies, and stars can be determined by observations over time by using telescopes

The Life Cycle of Stars. : Is the current theory of how our Solar System formed.

Stars and Galaxies 1

Physics HW Set 3 Spring 2015

10/26/ Star Birth. Chapter 13: Star Stuff. How do stars form? Star-Forming Clouds. Mass of a Star-Forming Cloud. Gravity Versus Pressure

1. What is the primary difference between the evolution of a low-mass star and that of a high-mass star?

Earth Space Systems. Semester 1 Exam. Astronomy Vocabulary

Life Cycle of a Star - Activities

Star formation and Evolution

Stars and Galaxies. Evolution of Stars

Exam # 3 Tue 12/06/2011 Astronomy 100/190Y Exploring the Universe Fall 11 Instructor: Daniela Calzetti

High Mass Stars and then Stellar Graveyard 7/16/09. Astronomy 101

Life and Death of a Star. Chapters 20 and 21

Abundance of Elements. Relative abundance of elements in the Solar System

Why Do Stars Leave the Main Sequence? Running out of fuel

Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE

Chapters 12 and 13 Review: The Life Cycle and Death of Stars. How are stars born, and how do they die? 4/1/2009 Habbal Astro Lecture 27 1

Chapter 17 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Star Stuff Pearson Education, Inc.

1. Star: A object made of gas found in outer space that radiates.

ASTRONOMY 1 FINAL EXAM 1 Name

What do the Roman numerals mean and how do stars die

Astro 21 first lecture. stars are born but also helps us study how. Density increases in the center of the star. The core does change from hydrogen to

21/11/ /11/2017 Space Physics AQA Physics topic 8

The Life and Death of Stars

CHAPTER 29: STARS BELL RINGER:

Life and Death of a Star 2015

Properties of Stars. Characteristics of Stars

ASTR Midterm 1 Phil Armitage, Bruce Ferguson

Universe Celestial Object Galaxy Solar System

GALAXIES AND STARS. 2. Which star has a higher luminosity and a lower temperature than the Sun? A Rigel B Barnard s Star C Alpha Centauri D Aldebaran

X Rays must be viewed from space used for detecting exotic objects such as neutron stars and black holes also observing the Sun.

SOLAR SYSTEM, STABILITY OF ORBITAL MOTIONS, SATELLITES

Stellar Evolution and the HertzsprungRussell Diagram 7/14/09. Astronomy 101

Birth and Death of Stars. Birth of Stars. Gas and Dust Clouds. Astronomy 110 Class 11

Low mass stars. Sequence Star Giant. Red. Planetary Nebula. White Dwarf. Interstellar Cloud. White Dwarf. Interstellar Cloud. Planetary Nebula.

The Universe. is space and everything in it.

Galaxies and Stars. 3. Base your answer to the following question on The reaction below represents an energy-producing process.

How Do Stars Appear from Earth?

Astronomy 104: Stellar Astronomy

The Formation of Stars

CHAPTER 9: STARS AND GALAXIES

Daily Science 03/30/2017

Stars and their properties: (Chapters 11 and 12)

Astronomy Ch. 21 Stellar Explosions. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

TAKE A LOOK 2. Identify This star is in the last stage of its life cycle. What is that stage?

Late stages of stellar evolution for high-mass stars

NSB ideas on Hertzsprung-Russell diagram

Protostars on the HR Diagram. Lifetimes of Stars. Lifetimes of Stars: Example. Pressure-Temperature Thermostat. Hydrostatic Equilibrium

Ch. 16 & 17: Stellar Evolution and Death

Ch. 25 In-Class Notes: Beyond Our Solar System

Gravity simplest. fusion

Summer 2013 Astronomy - Test 3 Test form A. Name

A Star is born: The Sun. SNC1D7-Space

L = 4 d 2 B p. 4. Which of the letters at right corresponds roughly to where one would find a red giant star on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram?

L = 4 d 2 B p. 1. Which outer layer of the Sun has the highest temperature? A) Photosphere B) Corona C) Chromosphere D) Exosphere E) Thermosphere

Chapter 28 Stars and Their Characteristics

Selected Questions from Minute Papers. Outline - March 2, Stellar Properties. Stellar Properties Recap. Stellar properties recap

25.2 Stellar Evolution. By studying stars of different ages, astronomers have been able to piece together the evolution of a star.

The Universe. But first, let s talk about light! 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

1 The Life Cycle of a Star

TEACHER BACKGROUND INFORMATION

Astronomy 104: Second Exam

Low-mass Stellar Evolution

Protostars on the HR Diagram. Lifetimes of Stars. Lifetimes of Stars: Example. Pressure-Temperature Thermostat. Hydrostatic Equilibrium

AST 101 Introduction to Astronomy: Stars & Galaxies

The Life Cycles of Stars. Modified from Information provided by: Dr. Jim Lochner, NASA/GSFC

Missing words: mass hydrogen burning electrostatic repulsion. gravitationally hydrogen temperature protostar

Heading for death. q q

Chapter 11 Review. 1) Light from distant stars that must pass through dust arrives bluer than when it left its star. 1)

Astro 1050 Fri. Apr. 10, 2015

Transcription:

NSCI 314 LIFE IN THE COSMOS 2 BASIC ASTRONOMY, AND STARS AND THEIR EVOLUTION Dr. Karen Kolehmainen Department of Physics CSUSB COURSE WEBPAGE: http://physics.csusb.edu/~karen

MOTIONS IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM EACH PLANET SPINS OR ROTATES ON ITS OWN AXIS, PRODUCING DAY AND NIGHT. THE EARTH SPINS ONCE EVERY 24 HOURS (1 DAY). EACH PLANET ORBITS OR REVOLVES AROUND THE SUN. THE EARTH COMPLETES ONE ORBIT IN 365 DAYS (1 YEAR). THE FARTHER A PLANET IS FROM THE SUN, THE LONGER IT TAKES TO COMPLETE ONE ORBIT (i.e.,the LONGER ITS YEAR). MOONS ORBIT AROUND PLANETS. THE EARTH'S MOON TAKES ABOUT A MONTH TO COMPLETE ONE ORBIT AROUND THE EARTH. SEASONS ARE CAUSED BY THE FACT THAT THE EARTH'S ROTATIONAL AXIS (THE LINE IT ROTATES AROUND) IS TIPPED.

UNITS FOR MEASURING DISTANCES ASTRONOMICAL UNIT (AU) THE AVERAGE DISTANCE BETWEEN THE EARTH AND THE SUN ABOUT 150,000,000 KM A UNIT OF DISTANCE USED WITHIN THE SOLAR SYSTEM LIGHT YEAR (LY) THE DISTANCE LIGHT TRAVELS IN ONE YEAR ABOUT 9.5 x 1012 KM OR 6333 AU A UNIT OF DISTANCE USED FOR STARS PARSEC (pc) ABOUT 3.26 LIGHT YEARS ANOTHER UNIT OF DISTANCE USED FOR STARS

PLANETS IN OUR SOLAR SYSTEM NAME MERCURY VENUS EARTH MARS JUPITER SATURN URANUS NEPTUNE Average Distance From Sun 0.4 AU 0.7 1.0 1.5 5.2 9.5 19 30 ALL PLANETS ORBIT THE SUN IN THE SAME DIRECTION, AND THEIR ORBITS ARE NEARLY IN THE SAME PLANE. THUS, THE SOLAR SYSTEM IS SHAPED LIKE A DISK.

MILKY WAY GALAXY SHAPE FLATTENED DISK DIAMETER 100,000 LY THICKNESS 2,000 LY NUMBER OF STARS 400 BILLION ROTATION PERIOD 250 MILLION YEARS SUN S DISTANCE FROM CENTER 30,000 LY AVERAGE DISTANCE BETWEEN STARS: 5 LY TYPICAL STAR 0.5 SOLAR MASSES

LIGHT TRAVEL TIMES ACROSS UNITED STATES 0.02 SECONDS EARTH TO MOON 1.3 SECONDS EARTH TO SUN 8 MINUTES ACROSS SOLAR SYSTEM FEW HOURS ACROSS MW GALAXY 100,000 YEARS NEAREST OTHER GALAXY 2 MILLION YRS. FARTHEST GALAXIES 10 BILLION YRS.

WHY EXAMINE STARS? WHETHER OR NOT A PLANET IS SUITABLE FOR LIFE PROBABLY DEPENDS A LOT ON WHAT TYPE OF STAR IT ORBITS. WE SHOULD THINK ABOUT WHETHER STARS THEMSELVES, AT ANY STAGE OF THEIR LIFETIMES, MIGHT BE SUITABLE LOCATIONS FOR LIFE.

TEMPERATURE SCALES SCALE ABSOLUTE ZERO WATER FREEZES WATER BOILS FAHRENHEIT -459 32 212 CELSIUS -273 0 100 273 373 KELVIN 0 THE HIGHER THE TEMPERATURE, THE FASTER THE RANDOM MOTION OF INDIVIDUAL PARTICLES. ABSOLUTE ZERO IS THE LOWEST POSSIBLE TEMPERATURE, AT WHICH THIS RANDOM MOTION STOPS. CONVERSION: TC = T 273 TF = (9/5) TC + 32 T IS KELVIN TEMPERATURE TC IS CELSIUS TEMPERATURE TF IS FAHRENHEIT TEMPERATURE

PROPERTIES OF STARS THE SUN: MASS: SOLAR MASS = 2 x 1030 kg = 330,000 EARTH MASSES = 1,000 JUPITER MASSES SIZE: SOLAR RADIUS = 7 X 105 km = 110 EARTH RADII BRIGHTNESS: SOLAR LUMINOSITY = 4x1026 W SURFACE TEMPERATURE: 6000 K (10,000 of) HYDROGEN COMPOSITION: 90.99% 8.87% 0.08% 0.03% 0.02% 0.01% <0.01% HELIUM OXYGEN CARBON NEON NITROGEN EVERYTHING ELSE OTHER STARS: MASS RANGES FROM 1/10 TO 20 SOLAR MASSES SIZE RANGES FROM 1/100 TO 500 SOLAR RADII BRIGHTNESS RANGES FROM 0.000001 (10-6 or 1 MILLIONTH) TO 1,000,000 (106 or 1 MILLION) SOLAR LUMINOSITIES TEMPERATURE RANGES FROM 2,500 K TO 30,000 K (OR 4000 of TO 50,000 of), AND RELATED TO COLOR

BLACKBODY RADIATION TYPE OF LIGHT THAT IS EMITTED BY A STAR OR ANY OTHER HOT GLOWING OBJECT THE COLOR OF LIGHT DEPENDS ONLY ON THE TEMPERATURE OF THE OBJECT: HOTTER OBJECTS ARE BLUER COOLER OBJECTS ARE REDDER ROOM TEMPERATURE OBJECTS EMIT IN INFRARED THE BRIGHTNESS OF THE LIGHT DEPENDS ON BOTH TEMPERATURE AND SIZE OF THE OBJECT: FOR OBJECTS OF THE SAME SIZE, HOTTER OBJECTS ARE BRIGHTER COOLER OBJECTS ARE FAINTER FOR OBJECTS OF THE SAME TEMPERATURE, BIGGER OBJECTS ARE BRIGHTER SMALLER OBJECTS ARE FAINTER

Blackbody Spectra

TYPES OF STARS MAIN SEQUENCE: THEY FUSE HYDROGEN INTO HELIUM FOR ENERGY. 90% OF STARS ARE THIS TYPE. THEIR SIZE, TEMPERATURE, AND BRIGHTNESS REMAIN RELATIVELY CONSTANT FOR A LONG PERIOD OF TIME (MILLIONS TO BILLIONS OF YEARS). GIANTS AND SUPER GIANTS: THEY FUSE HEAVIER ELEMENTS FOR ENERGY. THEY ARE MUCH LARGER AND MORE EVOLVED THAN MAIN SEQUENCE STARS. MOST ARE RED. WHITE DWARFS, NEUTRON STARS, & BLACK HOLES: DEAD STARS, END STAGES OF STELLAR EVOLUTION. SPECTRAL TYPES: O B A F G K M HOTTEST TO COOLEST BLUEST TO REDDEST SUN IS A G-TYPE MAIN SEQUENCE STAR HERTZSPRUNG-RUSSELL DIAGRAM: PLOT OF BRIGHTNESS vs. SPECTRAL TYPE OR TEMPERATURE

DWARFS AND GIANTS RED GIANTS AND SUPERGIANTS ARE BRIGHTER THAN MAIN SEQUENCE STARS OF THE SAME TEMPERATURE. THEREFORE THEY MUST BE LARGER. WHITE DWARFS ARE FAINTER THAN MAIN SEQUENCE STARS OF THE SAME TEMPERATURE. THEREFORE THEY MUST BE SMALLER.

THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM SPACE IS NOT TOTALLY EMPTY! ATOMS, MOLECULES, AND DUST PARTICLES ARE PRESENT MOSTLY HYDROGEN, HELIUM IS THE NEXT MOST ABUNDANT ELEMENT CONCENTRATED IN CLOUDS OR NEBULAE INTERSTELLAR MATTER IS VERY LOW DENSITY, EVEN IN MOST NEBULAE STARS FORM FROM NEBULAE, AND THEREFORE THEY CONTAIN THE SAME MIX OF ELEMENTS AS THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM OUT OF WHICH THEY FORMED (MOSTLY HYDROGEN)

OUTLINE OF STAR FORMATION - - - - A SUFFICIENTLY DENSE NEBULA (TYPICALLY ABOUT 1 LIGHT YEAR IN DIAMETER) STARTS TO COLLAPSE DUE TO GRAVITY, PULLING MATERIAL TOWARDS THE CENTER. AS THE CLOUD CONTRACTS, ITS ROTATION SPEEDS UP, IT FLATTENS, AND ITS TEMPERATURE INCREASES, ESPECIALLY IN THE CENTER. THE INNER PART OF THE CLOUD GETS HOT ENOUGH FOR MOLECULES TO BREAK APART INTO ATOMS, THEN FOR ATOMS TO IONIZE, AND FINALLY FOR HYDROGEN NUCLEI TO START TO FUSE TO FORM HELIUM NUCLEI. ONCE FUSION OF H TO He BEGINS, IT BECOMES A MAIN SEQUENCE STAR.

OUTLINE OF STAR FORMATION - THE STAR STABILIZES (STOPS CONTRACTING) BECAUSE OF THE HIGH TEMPERATURE, AND THUS HIGH PRESSURE, IN THE CENTER (MAINTAINED BY THE ENERGY RELEASE FROM THE NUCLEAR REACTIONS). THIS PROVIDES AN OUTWARD PUSH THAT BALANCES THE INWARD PULL OF GRAVITY. THE STAR REMAINS STABLE (NOT MUCH CHANGE IN SIZE, BRIGHTNESS, OR TEMPERATURE) FOR A LONG TIME. - IN MANY CASES, PLANETS AND SMALLER BODIES FORM FROM SMALLER LUMPS IN THE CLOUD THAT WERE NOT PULLED INTO THE CENTER. - SOMETIMES THE CLOUD BREAKS INTO SEVERAL LARGE FRAGMENTS AS IT CONTRACTS, EACH OF WHICH FORMS A SEPARATE STAR. THE RESULT IS A DOUBLE OR MULTIPLE STAR OR A SMALL CLUSTER OF STARS.

OUTLINE OF STAR FORMATION

NUCLEAR REACTIONS IN MAIN SEQUENCE STARS HIGH TEMPERATURE IS NECESSARY FOR NUCLEAR FUSION. THE NUCLEI MUST BE MOVING FAST ENOUGH TO COLLIDE DESPITE THEIR ELECTRICAL REPULSION. IN THE CORE OF A MAIN SEQUENCE STAR, TEMPERATURE IS ABOUT 15 MILLION K (27 MILLION of). HYDROGEN NUCLEI (PROTONS) FUSE TO FORM HELIUM. FOUR 1H (PROTONS) FUSE TO ONE 4He + ENERGY. TWO OF THE PROTONS ARE CONVERTED TO NEUTRONS. WHERE DOES THE ENERGY COME FROM? ONE 4He IS 0.7% LIGHTER THAN FOUR 1H COMBINED. THE LOST MASS IS CONVERTED TO ENERGY. E=mc2 ENERGY = MASS x (SPEED OF LIGHT)²

NUCLEAR REACTIONS IN MAIN SEQUENCE STARS THE SUN CONVERTS 4 BILLION kg OF MATTER INTO ENERGY EACH SECOND. THE SUN HAS SUFFICIENT HYDROGEN TO DO THIS FOR 100 BILLION YEARS, BUT WILL STOP AFTER ABOUT 10 BILLION YEARS BECAUSE ONLY THE CORE UNDERGOES FUSION. (THE OUTER PARTS OF THE STAR AREN T HOT ENOUGH FOR FUSION.) WHEN HYDROGEN IN THE CORE RUNS OUT, THIS MARKS THE END OF THE MAIN SEQUENCE LIFETIME. THE MORE MASSIVE THE STAR, THE SHORTER THE MAIN SEQUENCE LIFETIME. EVEN THOUGH THERE IS MORE HYDROGEN TO FUSE, FUSION PROCEEDS SO MUCH MORE RAPIDLY (BECAUSE IT IS HOTTER) THAT THE HYDROGEN IN THE CENTER DOESN T LAST AS LONG.

MAIN SEQUENCE STARS ALL PROPERTIES OF A MAIN SEQUENCE STAR DEPEND ON ITS MASS. MORE MASSIVE STARS ARE LARGER. MORE MASSIVE STARS ARE HOTTER. MORE MASSIVE STARS ARE BLUER. MORE MASSIVE STARS ARE BRIGHTER. MORE MASSIVE STARS HAVE SHORTER LIFETIMES. EVEN THOUGH THEY HAVE MORE NUCLEAR FUEL, THEY USE IT UP MORE QUICKLY BECAUSE OF THEIR HIGHER TEMPERATURES.

PROPERTIES OF MAIN SEQUENCE STARS Spectral Type Brightness (Sun = 1) Lifetime (Years) Number of Stars in MW Percent of Total O 100,000 5 million 80,000 0.00002 % B 500 10 million 360 million 0.09 % A 10 500 million 2.4 billion 0.6 % F 2 1 billion 12 billion 3% G 0.9 10 billion 28 billion 7% K 0.2 100 billion 60 billion 15 % M 0.005 1 trillion 290 billion 73 %

AT THE END OF THE MAIN SEQUENCE LIFETIME THE OUTER PART OF THE STAR EXPANDS BY UP TO 200 TIMES, BRIGHTENS BY UP TO 100 TIMES, AND COOLS TO 3,000 K. THE STAR BECOMES A RED GIANT. IN MASSIVE STARS, A SECOND STAGE OF EXPANSION AND COOLING PRODUCES A SUPERGIANT. MEANWHILE, THE CORE CONTRACTS AND HEATS UP UNTIL HELIUM BEGINS TO FUSE TO FORM HEAVIER ELEMENTS. THE STAR GOES THROUGH OCCASIONAL EPISODES OF INSTABILITY, WITH RAPID OSCILLATIONS IN SIZE, TEMPERATURE, AND BRIGHTNESS.

NUCLEAR REACTIONS IN RED GIANTS AND SUPERGIANTS He FUSES INTO CARBON, NITROGEN AND OXYGEN + ENERGY. IN LOW MASS STARS, FUSION STOPS HERE BECAUSE IT NEVER GETS HOT ENOUGH TO FUSE C, N, AND O TO EVEN HEAVIER ELEMENTS. IN MASSIVE STARS, CARBON FUSES INTO SILICON + ENERGY, THEN SILICON FUSES INTO IRON + ENERGY. FUSION OF IRON TO YET HEAVIER ELEMENTS WOULD REQUIRE ENERGY AS AN INPUT RATHER THAN RELEASING IT. (THE NUCLEUS THAT WOULD RESULT FROM FUSION IS HEAVIER THAN THE NUCLEI THAT WOULD FUSE TO FORM IT.) THIS ENERGY IS UNAVAILABLE, SO FUSION DOESN T PROCEED BEYOND IRON, NO MATTER HOW MASSIVE THE STAR.

LATE STAGES OF STELLAR EVOLUTION FOR SOLAR-TYPE (LOW MASS) STARS PLANETARY NEBULA: OUTER PART OF STAR IS EJECTED. EJECTED MATERIAL EXPANDS, COOLS, AND ENRICHES INTERSTELLAR MATERIAL WITH HEAVIER ELEMENTS (FUSION PRODUCTS). CORE OF STAR REMAINS IN CENTER OF NEBULA, AND BECOMES A WHITE DWARF: CORE OF ORIGINAL STAR LEFT AFTER OUTER PARTS ARE EJECTED; NO MORE FUSION; SHRINKS TO ABOUT EARTH-SIZE, VERY SLOWLY COOLS AND DIMS UNTIL EVENTUALLY IT BECOMES A BLACK DWARF: NO MORE LIGHT EMITTED. STELLAR CORPSE IS A DENSE SOLID BALL OF CARBON, NITROGEN, AND OXYGEN.

LATE STAGES OF STELLAR EVOLUTION FOR MASSIVE STARS SUPERNOVA (TYPE II): CORE OF RED SUPERGIANT COLLAPSES UNTIL NUCLEI COLLIDE WITH EACH OTHER AT HIGH SPEED, NUCLEI PUSH EACH OTHER APART VIOLENTLY, CAUSING STAR TO EXPLODE. FUSION OF HEAVY ELEMENTS (EVEN HEAVIER THAN IRON) OCCURS, AND THESE ARE THEN ADDED TO THE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM. NEUTRON STAR OR BLACK HOLE: CORE OF ORIGINAL STAR LEFT OVER AFTER THE SUPERNOVA EXPLOSION, EXTREMELY DENSE

NEUTRON STAR BALL OF NEUTRONS (LIKE A BIG NUCLEUS) RADIUS ABOUT 10 km MASS OF SEVERAL SOLAR MASSES HIGH DENSITY ONE TEASPOONFUL OF NEUTRON STAR MATERIAL WOULD WEIGH A BILLION TONS MANY NEUTRON STARS EMIT PULSES OF RADIO WAVES AND OTHER ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION, AND ARE OBSERVED AS PULSARS

BLACK HOLE SO MASSIVE THAT NOTHING, NOT EVEN LIGHT, CAN ESCAPE. (ESCAPE VELOCITY EXCEEDS THE SPEED OF LIGHT.) EVENT HORIZON SEALS OFF THE INTERIOR FROM THE REST OF THE UNIVERSE. EVENT HORIZON HAS RADIUS OF SEVERAL km FOR STELLAR MASS BLACK HOLES. MATTER INSIDE EVENT HORIZON PROBABLY CONTRACTS TO A SINGULARITY INFINITE DENSITY! CAN SOMETIMES BE DETECTED VIA GRAVITATIONAL EFFECTS ON OTHER OBJECTS (E.G., IN A DOUBLE STAR SYSTEM) AND/OR FROM X-RAYS EMITTED BY MATTER FALLING IN. IN ADDITION TO STELLAR-MASS BLACK HOLES FORMED AT END OF LIVES OF MASSIVE STARS, LARGER BLACK HOLES EXIST IN THE CENTERS OF MOST GALAXIES (INCLUDING MILKY WAY).

ESCAPE VELOCITY SPEED NEEDED WHEN TAKING OFF FROM THE SURFACE OF A PLANET OR OTHER OBJECT TO ESCAPE THE OBJECT S GRAVITY (TECHNICALLY, TO ESCAPE TO AN INFINITE DISTANCE AWAY, SLOWING TO ZERO SPEED IN THE PROCESS) EARTH'S ESCAPE VELOCITY IS 11 km/s THE MORE MASSIVE THE OBJECT, THE LARGER THE ESCAPE VELOCITY. THE SMALLER THE RADIUS OF THE OBJECT, THE LARGER THE ESCAPE VELOCITY. THEREFORE, A MASSIVE BUT SMALL OBJECT WILL HAVE A LARGE ESCAPE VELOCITY.