4.2 Stars have Life Cycles

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STARS CHANGED OVER THEIR LIFE CYCLES Space Science: Chapter 4: Section 4.2

description

Presented on Monday November 23rd. This follows the textbook- Chapter 4 Section 4.3

Transcript of 4.2 Stars have Life Cycles

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STARS CHANGED OVER THEIR LIFE CYCLES

Space Science:Chapter 4: Section 4.2

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Let’s Begin

Why do stars look like small points of light?

Why don’t they look like in the sky?

Stars are very far away. We only see a few thousand of stars that exist.

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What unit of measurement do we use to measure the distance between stars?

Light-years The distance light travels in one year

Approximately 6 trillion miles

The closest star to Earth is our Sun

The next closest star is 4 light years away

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How do we measure how far stars are away from Earth?

Using parallax The apparent shift in the position of an object when viewed from different locations

Parallax Demonstrations

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Size: the Sun’s diameter is 100x greater than Earth’s

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Some stars are much larger than the Sun. Giant and Super giants are 10-100’s of times larger.

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Betelgeuse: 600 times greater than the Sun

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There are stars much smaller than the Sun as well. These are called white dwarfs.

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What color are the stars we see?

Most stars are white Some appear red Some appear blue

Why is that? Differences in color are due to differences in temperature

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Think of:

The metal coils inside of a toaster

Start off as a dull red Later turn a bright orange

Temperature affects color by heating up the metal

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Stars have life cycles:Length of the cycle and the way a star changes depends on the mass of the star

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Nebula:

All stars form inside a cloud of gas and dust called a nebula

Gravity pulls the dust closer together

The matter contracts and forms a hot dense sphere

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Main Sequence:

Fusion begins if the matter gains enough temperature and density

The birth of main sequence stars

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Low-Mass Stars:

Once fusion begins the star is then classified as a main sequence star Low-mass stars use their fuel slowly Remain in this stage for billions of years

As low-mass stars run out of fuel it expands into a giant star

Once the giant sheds it outer layer it leaves behind a dead core called a white dwarf

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High-Mass Stars:

Once fusion begins the star is then classified as a main sequence star High-mass stars use their fuel quickly Remain in this stage for millions of years

As high- mass stars run out of fuel it expands into a super giant

The super giant explodes when no more fusion can occur- called a supernova

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High-Mass Stars: After supernova May form a dense

body called a neutron star Star squeezes itself

smaller Very DENSE- Example:

pea size sample weighs 100 million tons

Gravitational force collapses atoms

Electrons combined with protons to produce neutrons

May form a black hole More dense than

neutron star Intense surface

gravity lets no light escape

As matter is pulled into the black hole it becomes very hot and emits x-rays

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The Sun is what type of star? Low-Mass Main Sequence Star

What is going to happen to the Sun? Eventually expand into a Red Giant Cool down into a white dwarf Scientist predict that in 4.5 billions years

the Sun will run out of fuel and will form a Red Giant

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