Stellar Evolution: Red Giant Phase to Remnant
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Transcript Stellar Evolution: Red Giant Phase to Remnant
Red Giant Phase to Remnant
(Chapter 10)
Student Learning Objective
• Describe or diagram the evolutionary
phases from the beginning of stellar
formation to remnant
Low Mass & High Mass
What happens during the red giant phase?
Nuclear fusion in the core stops.
All hydrogen has been used
It is not hot enough to fuse helium
The core and surrounding layers collapse.
Collapsing layers heat
Gravity “wins”
Inert Helium Core
Hydrogen begins burning
in a heated shell
surrounding the core.
Outer layers expand and
cool.
Pressure “wins”
Practice
1) What provides “normal” pressure in a star?
2) Why do collapsing layers heat?
3) Why do the outer layers cool?
Helium fusion begins in
the core.
T = 100 Million Kelvin
Helium Fusion = Carbon
and Oxygen core
Helium Fusion in Core
+
Hydrogen Fusion in Shell
=
Outer Layers Expand More
Science Daily
1-3 Msun
High Mass Star
Low Mass Star
The Red Giant pulsates.
Hydrostatic equilibrium is out of balance.
Low Mass
High Mass
RR Lyrae variables
Cepheid variables
Period = less than 1 day
Period = 1-50 days
Practice
1) Describe what is happening as a Red Giant pulsates.
2) What will happen to Earth as the surface of the Sun
approaches?
Diameter 100+ larger
Mercury and Venus in Sun
Earth at surface of Sun
What remains of a Low Mass Star
after nuclear fusion ends?
Stars less than 0.4 Msun become a Red Dwarf.
Extremely low mass stars can only transport heat by
convection.
Star accesses hydrogen from all layers
Fusion ends when all hydrogen is gone
Remnant slowly fades
A Red Dwarf with an Earth
NASA
Low mass stars like the Sun become a White
Dwarf.
Hot collapsed core (White Dwarf)
Surrounding ejected layers (Planetary Nebula)
White Dwarf
The Process of becoming
a White Dwarf
• Core contracts
• Outer layers expand and thin
• Pulsating star ejects outer
layers (Planetary Nebula)
• Planetary nebula glows (heat
excites gasses)
The White Dwarf will
fade over time into a
Black Dwarf.
A White Dwarf is the
compact core remnant of a
low mass star.
Electron Degenerate Matter
Ends core collapse of Low Mass star
Electron orbits are restricted
Orbits “hold up” the White Dwarf core remnant
Planetary nebula in constellation Lyra
Ring Nebula
The Littlest Ghost Nebula
Image Credit: APOD
White Dwarf Limit
The Chandrasekhar limit is 1.4 Msun.
A “Sun” becomes the size of Earth
As much as 40% of star ejected
What remains of a High Mass Star
after nuclear fusion ends?
A high mass star goes through several “Red Giant”
phases as it fuses heavier nuclei in the core and
surrounding layers.
Then it explodes! (SN Explosion)
Image Credit: Australia Telescope National Facility
Type II Supernova
High mass stars explode.
Energy production ends abruptly
Core cannot fuse iron (Fe)
Degenerate pressure cannot stop collapse
Gravity “wins”
The Explosion
A Type II SN explosion only takes milliseconds.
Core collapses
Entire star falls in on itself and rebounds
A pressure wave (shock wave) is produced
Outer layers are blasted into space
1028 Megatons of TNT released
Heaviest elements are produced
100’s to Millions times brighter than original star
Type II Supernova
Neutron Star
or
Black Hole
SN Remnant
The outer layers of the high mass star expand rapidly
and collide with ISM.
ISM glows
May initiate new Star formation
In 1 year 0.3 LY across
In 100 years Several LY across
The Crab Nebula from VLT
Supernova Remnant Cassiopeia A (Hubble)
Kepler’s Supernova Remnant
NASA
What are the possible fates in a binary system?
Each of the stars in a binary system gravitationally
controls a volume of space called a Roche lobe.
Matter at the inner Lagrangian point, can
transfer to a companion object.
The object accreting matter may go nova!
Nova
A Nova is a thermal
nuclear explosion on the
surface of a core remnant.
Red Giant fills Roche Lobe
Core remnant companion
accumulates matter
Nova
Nova Velorum 1999 (APOD)
Type Ia SN
A Type Ia Supernova is a Nova that destroys the
object accreting matter.
Object accumulates too much mass
Explosion of entire object (Type Ia SN)
Nothing remains
Practice
1) What is the primary difference between a Nova and a
Type Ia SN?
2) Can our Sun become a Type II SN? Why?
3) Can our Sun become a Nova? Why?
4) Can our Sun become a Type Ia SN? Why?
Why are star clusters important?
The HR diagram can show the age of the cluster.
Comparing relative ages leads to understanding
stellar evolution.
Open Clusters
Open clusters contain
young stars.
100 to 1000 members
See individual stars
25 parsecs across
Globular Clusters
Globular Clusters
contain old stars.
Millions of members
Appears as single object
10-30 parsecs across
Star clusters demonstrate the evolutionary
process of stars.
Practice
Which HR diagram shows the youngest cluster?