The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust...

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The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11

Transcript of The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust...

Page 1: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

The Formation and Structure of Stars

Chapter 11

Page 2: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars. Here you will begin putting together observations and theories to learn how nature makes stars from the interstellar medium and to understand the internal structure of stars. That will answer four essential questions:

•How do stars form?

•What is the evidence that theories of star formation are correct?

•How do stars maintain their stability?

•How do stars make energy?

Guidepost

Page 3: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

As you finish this chapter you will have gained a view of the exciting and energetic infancy of stars. In the next chapter, you will follow stars into their stable, slowly evolving adult life stage, called the main sequence.

Guidepost

Page 4: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

I. Making Stars from the Interstellar MediumA. Star Birth in Giant Molecular CloudsB. Heating By ContractionC. Protostars

II. The Orion Nebula: Evidence of Star FormationA. Observing Star FormationB. Contagious Star Formation

III. Young Stellar Objects and Protostellar Disks

IV. Stellar StructureA. What Keeps a Star Stable?B. Energy Transport

Outline

Page 5: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

V. The Source of Stellar EnergyA. A Review of the Proton-Proton ChainB. The CNO CycleC. Inside Stars

VI. The Pressure-Temperature Thermostat

Outline (continued)

Page 6: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

The Life Cycle of StarsDense, dark clouds, possibly forming stars in the future

Young stars, still in their birth

nebulae

Aging supergiant

Stars are not eternal.They are being born, live a finite life time, and die.

Page 7: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Parameters of Giant Molecular Clouds

Size: r ~ 50 pcMass: > 100,000 Msun

Dense cores:

Temp.: a few 0K

R ~ 0.1 pcM ~ 1 Msun

Much too cold and too low density to ignite thermonuclear processes

Clouds need to contract and heat up in order to form stars.

Stars are formed during the collapse of the cores of Giant Molecular Clouds.

Page 8: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Contraction of Giant Molecular Cloud Cores

• Thermal Energy (pressure)

• Magnetic Fields

• Rotation (angular momentum)

External trigger required to initiate the collapse of clouds

to form stars. Horse Head Nebula

• Turbulence

Factors resisting the collapse of a gas cloud:

Page 9: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Shocks Triggering Star Formation

Globules = sites where stars are being born right now!

Trifid Nebula

Page 10: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Sources of Shock Waves Triggering Star Formation (1)Previous star formation can trigger further star formation through:

a) Shocks from supernovae (explosions of massive stars):

Massive stars die young => Supernovae tend to

happen near sites of recent star formation

Page 11: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Sources of Shock Waves Triggering Star Formation (2)

Previous star formation can trigger further star formation through: b) Ionization

fronts of hot, massive O or B

stars which produce a lot of

UV radiation:

Massive stars die young => O and B stars only exist

near sites of recent star formation

Page 12: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Sources of Shock Waves Triggering Star Formation (3)

Giant molecular clouds are very large and may occasionally

collide with each other

c) Collisions of giant

molecular clouds

Page 13: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Sources of Shock Waves Triggering Star Formation (4)

d) Spiral arms in galaxies like our Milky Way:

Spiral arms are probably

rotating shock- wave patterns.

Page 14: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Protostars

Protostars = pre-birth state of stars:

Hydrogen to Helium fusion

not yet ignited

Still enshrouded in opaque “cocoons” of dust => barely visible in the optical, but bright in the infrared

Page 15: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Heating By ContractionAs a protostar contracts, it heats up:

Free-fall contraction→ Heating

Page 16: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

From Protostars to Stars

Higher-mass stars evolve more rapidly

from protostars to stars than less massive

stars

Page 17: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

From Protostars to Stars

The Birth Line:

Star emerges from the enshrouding dust cocoon

Page 18: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

The Orion Nebula: Evidence of Star Formation

Page 19: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

In the Orion Nebula

The Becklin-Neugebauer Object (BN): Hot star, just reaching the

main sequence

Kleinmann-Low nebula (KL):

Cluster of cool, young

protostars detectable only in the infrared

Visual image of the Orion Nebula

Protostars with protoplanetary disks

B3

B1B1

O6

Page 20: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Open Clusters of StarsLarge masses of Giant Molecular Clouds => Stars do not form isolated, but in large groups, called Open Clusters of Stars.

Page 21: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Young Star ClustersUltraviolet radiation and strong stellar winds from young, hot, massive stars in open star clusters are compressing the surrounding gas.

30 Doradus

NGC 602

Page 22: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Protostellar Disks

Conservation of angular momentum leads to the formation of protostellar disks birth place of planets and moons

Page 23: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Protostellar Disks and Jets – Herbig-Haro Objects

Disks of matter accreted onto the protostar (“accretion disks”) often lead to the formation of jets (directed outflows; bipolar outflows): Herbig-Haro Objects

Page 24: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Protostellar Disks and Jets – Herbig-Haro Objects (2)

Herbig-Haro Object HH34

Page 25: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Protostellar Disks and Jets – Herbig-Haro Objects (3)

Herbig-Haro Object HH30

Page 26: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Stellar Structure

Temperature, density and pressure decreasing

Energy generation via nuclear fusion

Energy transport via radiation

Energy transport via convection

Flo

w o

f en

erg

y

Basically the same structure for all stars with approx. 1 solar

mass or less

Sun

Page 27: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Hydrostatic Equilibrium

Imagine a star’s interior composed of individual

shells…

Within each shell, two forces have to be in equilibrium with

each other:

Outward pressure from the interior

Gravity, i.e. the weight from all layers above

Page 28: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Hydrostatic Equilibrium (2)

Outward pressure force must exactly balance the weight of all layers above everywhere in the star.

This condition uniquely determines the interior structure of the star.

This is why we find stable stars on such a narrow

strip (Main Sequence) in the Hertzsprung-Russell

diagram.

Page 29: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Energy TransportEnergy generated in the star’s center must be

transported to the surface.

Physicists know of three ways in which energy can be transported:

Page 30: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Energy Transport (2)However, in stars, only two energy transport

mechanisms play a role:

Inner layers:

Radiative energy transport

Outer layers (including photosphere):

Convection

Bubbles of hot gas rising up

Cool gas sinking downGas particles

of solar interior-rays

Page 31: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

The Source of Stellar Energy

In the sun, this happens primarily through the proton-proton (PP) chain.

Recall from our discussion of the sun:

Stars produce energy by nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium.

Page 32: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

The CNO Cycle

In stars slightly more massive than the sun, a more powerful

energy generation mechanism than

the PP chain takes over:

The CNO Cycle.

Page 33: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Energy Transport Structure

Inner radiative, outer convective

zone

Inner convective, outer radiative

zone

CNO cycle dominant PP chain dominant

Page 34: The Formation and Structure of Stars Chapter 11. The last chapter introduced you to the gas and dust between the stars that are raw material for new stars.

Summary: Stellar Structure

MassSun

Radiative Core, convective envelope;

Energy generation through PP Cycle

Convective Core, radiative envelope;

Energy generation through CNO Cycle