Stellar Interior: Physical Processes

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

Astronomy 104: Stellar Astronomy

Astronomy 404 October 9, 2013

Ch. 29 The Stars Stellar Evolution

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

MAJOR NUCLEAR BURNING STAGES

Stars and their properties: (Chapters 11 and 12)

The Sun Closest star to Earth - only star that we can see details on surface - easily studied Assumption: The Sun is a typical star

A Star Becomes a Star

11/19/08. Gravitational equilibrium: The outward push of pressure balances the inward pull of gravity. Weight of upper layers compresses lower layers

Reading and Announcements. Read Chapter 14.1, 14.2 Homework #6 due Tuesday, March 26 Exam #2, Thursday, March 28

Chapter 12: The Life Cycle of Stars (contʼd) How are stars born, and how do they die? 4/9/09 Habbal Astro Lecture 25 1

The Life Cycles of Stars. Dr. Jim Lochner, NASA/GSFC

High Mass Stars. Dr Ken Rice. Discovering Astronomy G

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

Evolution of High Mass Stars

Origin of Elements OUR CONNECTION TO THE STARS

IB Test. Astrophysics HL. Name_solution / a) Describe what is meant by a nebula [1]

Lecture 8: Stellar evolution II: Massive stars

Stellar processes, nucleosynthesis OUTLINE

LIFE CYCLE OF A STAR

Interactions. Laws. Evolution

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

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

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

Life of a High-Mass Stars

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

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

ORIGIN OF THE ELEMENETS

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

Life and Death of a Star 2015

The Sun = Typical Star

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

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

Planetary Nebulae White dwarfs

Chapter CHAPTER 11 ORIGIN OF THE ELEMENTS

Today The Sun. Events

In the Beginning. After about three minutes the temperature had cooled even further, so that neutrons were able to combine with 1 H to form 2 H;

The Later Evolution of Low Mass Stars (< 8 solar masses)

Late stages of stellar evolution for high-mass stars

Announcements. L! m 3.5 BRIGHT FAINT. Mass Luminosity Relation: Why? Homework#3 will be handed out at the end of this lecture.

13 Synthesis of heavier elements. introduc)on to Astrophysics, C. Bertulani, Texas A&M-Commerce 1

Stars IV Stellar Evolution

17.3 Life as a High-Mass Star

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

The Stars. Chapter 14

Stellar Structure. Observationally, we can determine: Can we explain all these observations?

Ay 1 Lecture 8. Stellar Structure and the Sun

LIFE CYCLE OF A STAR

Dark Matter. About 90% of the mass in the universe is dark matter Initial proposals: MACHOs: massive compact halo objects

AST101 Lecture 13. The Lives of the Stars

Reading Clicker Q 2/7/17. Topics for Today and Thur. ASTR 1040: Stars & Galaxies

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

Stellar energy generation on the main sequence

Low-mass Stellar Evolution

Outline - March 18, H-R Diagram Review. Protostar to Main Sequence Star. Midterm Exam #2 Tuesday, March 23

Atoms and Star Formation

Before proceeding to Chapter 20 More on Cluster H-R diagrams: The key to the chronology of our Galaxy Below are two important HR diagrams:

Today. Stars. Evolution of High Mass Stars. Nucleosynthesis. Supernovae - the explosive deaths of massive stars

The Later Evolution of Low Mass Stars (< 8 solar masses)

Things to do 3/6/14. Topics for Today & Tues. Clicker review red giants. 2: Subgiant to Red Giant (first visit)

What Powers the Stars?

Nuclear Physics and Astrophysics of Exploding Stars

Birth & Death of Stars

Principles of Astrophysics and Cosmology

Guiding Questions. The Deaths of Stars. Pathways of Stellar Evolution GOOD TO KNOW. Low-mass stars go through two distinct red-giant stages

The Deaths of Stars 1

Evolution and nucleosynthesis prior to the AGB phase

Today in Astronomy 142

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

Stellar Evolution: The Deaths of Stars. Guiding Questions. Pathways of Stellar Evolution. Chapter Twenty-Two

Guiding Questions. The Deaths of Stars. Pathways of Stellar Evolution GOOD TO KNOW. Low-mass stars go through two distinct red-giant stages

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?

Announcements. - Homework #5 due today - Review on Monday 3:30 4:15pm in RH103 - Test #2 next Tuesday, Oct 11

10/17/2012. Stellar Evolution. Lecture 14. NGC 7635: The Bubble Nebula (APOD) Prelim Results. Mean = 75.7 Stdev = 14.7

Life and Death of a Star. Chapters 20 and 21

AST 101 Introduction to Astronomy: Stars & Galaxies

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

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

20. Stellar Death. Interior of Old Low-Mass AGB Stars

Chapter 12: The Lives of Stars. How do we know it s there? Three Kinds of Nebulae 11/7/11. 1) Emission Nebulae 2) Reflection Nebulae 3) Dark Nebulae

The dying sun/ creation of elements

ASTRONOMY 1 EXAM 3 a Name

Astro Instructors: Jim Cordes & Shami Chatterjee.

Introductory Astrophysics A113. Death of Stars. Relation between the mass of a star and its death White dwarfs and supernovae Enrichment of the ISM

Stars: Their Life and Afterlife

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

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

The Sun Our Nearest Star The Sun is an average star in mass, lifetime, and energy output. We will look at in detail before studying stars in general

Stellar Astronomy Sample Questions for Exam 4

Today. Homework Due. Stars. Properties (Recap) Nuclear Reactions. proton-proton chain. CNO cycle. Stellar Lifetimes

7. The Evolution of Stars a schematic picture (Heavily inspired on Chapter 7 of Prialnik)

Chemical Evolution of the Universe

Lecture 16: Evolution of Low-Mass Stars Readings: 21-1, 21-2, 22-1, 22-3 and 22-4

What You Should Know About Stars With Less Than 8 Solar Masses!

NSCI 314 LIFE IN THE COSMOS

Stars with Mⵙ go through two Red Giant Stages

ASTR Midterm 1 Phil Armitage, Bruce Ferguson

Lecture 33: The Lives of Stars

Daily Science 03/30/2017

Transcription:

Physics Focus on Astrophysics Focus on Astrophysics Stellar Interior: Physical Processes D. Fluri, 29.01.2014

Content 1. Mechanical equilibrium: pressure gravity 2. Fusion: Main sequence stars: hydrogen helium Formation of heavy elements 3. Internal structure of stars

Mechanical equilibrium Stars in continuous battle with own gravity Gravity points inward, pressure force points outward Pressure built up due to energy release at center (fusion) Star loses energy at surface supplies needed! Stop of fusion star contracts (at least its core)

Mechanical equilibrium Described by a fundamental equation of stellar evolution: dp dr GM r 2 r where P pressure at radius r G gravitational constant M r mass of sphere with radius r density at radius r

Solar interior: temperature and pressure

Content 1. Mechanical equilibrium: pressure gravity 2. Fusion: Main sequence stars: hydrogen helium Formation of heavy elements 3. Internal structure of stars

H and He formed 3 minutes after Big Bang Today s abundances of chemical elements

Fusion in stars Stars are fusion reactors Main sequence stars fuse ( burn ) H to He in the center 2 processes for H-burning (i.e. fusion H He): pp-chain ( proton-proton-chain ) CNO-cycle ( carbon-nitrogen-oxygen-cycle )

H-burning: pp-chain (only possibility for 1 st stars) Energy production rate: T 4 Too small for massive stars Very slow: ~10 9 y (lifetime Sun!) Big Bang: no time to wait, but neutrons available!

H-burning: pp-chain 1 st step: Energy release per process 0.420 MeV (minus 0.263 MeV, lost by neutrino) Positron e + annihilates with electron 2 photons released: 1.022 MeV Mean waiting time per proton: 14 bill. years 2 nd step: Energy release per process 5.493 MeV Mean waiting time per deuterium 1.4 s 3 rd step: Energy release 12.859 MeV Mean waiting time per 3 He-nucleus: 1 mill. years Total energy release: [2 (1.442 0.263) + 2 5.493 + 12.859] MeV = 26.2 MeV

H-burning: pp-chain Two alternatives for 3 rd step Via Be and Li, or via Be and B In the sun: 91% according to first process Branching ratio of different processes temperature dependent Required temperature (at typical pressures in stars): > 10 Mio. K

Neutrinos Elementary particles: Very small mass (only upper boundary known) No electric charge Only subject to weak interaction and gravity

Detection of neutrinos Neutrino flux on Earth: 6 10 10 cm 2 s 1 Earth transparent for neutrinos Detectors: 1 km below Earth s surface Huge water containers, e.g. 50 000 tons of water (Super-Kamiokande, Japan) Only 2 3 detections per hour By the way (movie 2012): Energy of neutrinos blocked by Earth not sufficient to heat glass of tea (by orders of magnitude!) 10 13 times more energy released by radioactive decays inside Earth

Detection of neutrinos Sun, observed with neutrino detector (Super-Kamiokande, Japan), exposure time ": 500 days Direct proof of fusion as source of energy!

H-burning: CNO cycle More efficient than pp-chain at high temperatures C, N, O catalysts Controlled by 12 C abundance: initially not possible in Pop. III stars! Alternative branch possible Chemical composition changes: 1 H reduced, 4 He increased 12 C reduced, 14 N increased 18

H-burning: CNO cycle C, N, O as catalysts Energy released: 25.03 MeV Not possible in first stars (no 12 C) Duration of 1 cycle: 340 Mio. years Long, but faster than pp-chain! Stars release more energy by CNO-cycle Required temperature: > 14 Mio. K Alternatives possible (T > 22 Mio. K) from 15 N via 16 O 14 N Chemical composition modified: 1 H reduced, 4 He increased 12 C reduced, 14 N increased

H-burning: pp-chain CNO-cycle 10 mio. K < T < 18 mio. K pp-chain dominates (low mass stars, e.g. sun) T > 18 mio. K CNO-cycle dominates (massive stars) 18

H-burning Formation of He core After 5 billion years (sun): 5% of total mass fused H He H and He abundances not modified at surface! No mixing of core and surface! Example: sun

Content 1. Mechanical equilibrium: pressure gravity 2. Fusion: Main sequence stars: hydrogen helium Formation of heavy elements 3. Internal structure of stars

He-burning: Triple- process 3 4 He 12 C 4 He + 4 He 8 Be 8 Be + 4 He 12 C + unstable, decay in 3 10 16 s Excited state of 12 C near energy! Energy production rate (at T 10 8 K): T 40

Formation of heavy elements When H used up in core: shell burning Core collapses until temperature high enough for He-burning And so on for heavier elements... C, O, Ne, Mg, Fe (if star massive enough) Onion shells Burning of heavier elements faster (Si Fe, Ni lasts 1 d)

Formation of heavy elements Fe: further fusion eats energy supernova Elements heavier than Fe form only in supernovae

Nucleosynthesis Cycle Accumulation of heavy elements in stars Young stars Low-mass stars (~1 M ) Time scale:10 10 y Massive stars (~10 M ) Time scale: 10 7 y C,N,O,Fe Supernovae Planetary nebulae C,O Interstellar material He,C Fe White Dwarfs Neutron Stars Black Holes

Content 1. Mechanical equilibrium: pressure gravity 2. Fusion: Main sequence stars: hydrogen helium Formation of heavy elements 3. Internal structure of stars

Internal structure of the sun Core: Fusion Energy released Up to 0.25 R Radiation zone Up to 0.7 R Energy transport by radiation Stable layers Convection zone Above radiation zone Energy transport by convection Layering unstable Material mixed within convection zone

Internal structure of stars Depends on stellar mass and evolutionary state Main sequence stars:

Internal structure of stars Hot stars (left side): only core convective Cool stars (right side): outer convection zone Later than M4 stars: fully convective

Prerequisites for convection? Displace plasma bubble upwards (adiabatically): 1. Density smaller than in surroundings further ascent convection 2. Density greater than in surroundings descent stable (no convection) Pressure equilibrium: Pressure in bubble = pressure outside Necessary condition for convection: Density in bubble smaller than outside after displacement Temperature in bubble greater than outside after displacement Temperature gradient steeper than adiabatic Temperature gradient