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X. Star Formation
 A. Interstellar Medium: The collective name for all
 matter located between stars.
    1. Made up of Gas & Dust
         a. Gases produces absorption lines in the
            star light that passes through it.
                    Absorption lines




    b. Dust acts to block light at most
       frequencies above infrared. Thus the
       light from stars appear redder then they
    would otherwise. This is called Reddening
B. Density & Composition
  1) On average there is one atom of interstellar material per
  square centimeter. VERY low density.


  2) The gas is composed of 90% Hydrogen and 9% Helium.


  3) The composition of interstellar dust, is mostly unknown,
  but is believed to be heavier elements and “dirty” ices.
4) Interstellar Clouds: are areas of higher then average
  density of gas and dust.
5) Types of Interstellar Clouds
  a. Emission Nebula: HOT clouds of gas and dust that give off light.


  - At or near the center
  of an emission nebula
 is located a hot O or B
 type star.


  - These are areas
 where new stars are
 forming.


  - Can be several hundred
   light years across.
5) Types of Interstellar Clouds
  b. Dark Dust Clouds: COOL clouds in space that do not radiate light.


  - Tend to be denser
   then emission nebulae


  - Range from the size of
   our solar system to a
   few parsecs across.


  - are not the site of new
   star formation
B. Formation of Sun-Like Stars
- Over time the atoms & molecules in interstellar
clouds are affected by each others gravity and they
clump together which leads to star formation.
  Stage 1) An Interstellar Cloud
       a. Part of an interstellar cloud begins to
          collapse.
       b. This cloud is typically 1000’s of times the
       mass of the sun and 10’s of parsecs
       across.
Stage 1) An Interstellar Cloud
     c. As it shrinks it begins to fracture into
     smaller parts.
     d. Each part of the could can give rise to a
          new star.
Stage 2) Contracting Cloud Fragment
      a. At stage 2, the piece of cloud is about 100x
         the size of our solar system and has about
            two solar masses worth of material.


     b. Even though it is continuing to contract,
        most of the heat is still lost to interstellar
          space because the molecules of the
cloud             are still very far apart.
Stage 3) Contracting Cloud Fragment
  a. At stage 3 the cloud has contracted into a
     sphere roughly the diameter of our solar
        system.
  b. The interior of the cloud has heated to over
     10,000K and a protostar forms at the
     center.
Stage 4) Protostar Evolution
a. The protostar has shrunk to roughly the
   size of Mercury’s orbit.
b. The core of the protostar is about 1,000,000K
   - Hot enough to strip electrons off of the
     atoms but not hot enough to start fusion.
Stage 5) Protostar Evolution
  a. The star heats to a point nearing that
     needed for fusion.
  b. The star is VERY bright but also very cool.
  c. The brightness of the star comes from
               energy released
               as the star contracts
  d. At this point we can
     plot our protostar on
     the HR diagram.
Stages 6 & 7) New formed Star
  a. At stage 6 the core has heated enough to
     begin fusing hydrogen atoms into helium,
     but is still twice the size of the sun.
  b. At stage 7 the star has completed
     contracting and has reached the main
     sequence.
X. Star Formation
 C. Formation of Other Sized Stars
     1. More Massive stars –
           a. Form from more massive cloud fragments.
           b. Are found “higher” on the main sequence
              then the sun.


 c. This means that classes
     O-F are, generally, more
     massive than the sun.
C. Formation of Other Sized Stars
   2. Less Massive stars –
         a. Form from less massive cloud fragments.
         b. Are found “lower” on the main sequence
            then the sun.


c. This means that classes
   K & M are, generally, less
   massive than the sun.
D. Formation Tracks
   1. Remember that we can plot proto stars on the HR
        diagram and follow them through the stages of
        formation until they reach the main sequence
        (stage 7)
2. The shape of star forming
   tracks are the same but
   their position depends on
   their mass.
      a. higher for high mass
      b. lower for low mass
E) The End Result (dun… Dun… DUN!!!)
 1) The end result of cloud collapse is a Star Cluster.
    a. A star cluster is a group of stars that form
 the same collapsing cloud of gas and dust.
    b. These stars have similar characteristics.
      - Very close ages
      - Same initial composition
      - Similar distance from the earth
    c. This makes them ideal stellar laboratories
    for testing different theories of stellar evolution.
2) Open Clusters: Small star clusters a few pc
across with 100’s to 10,000’s of stars.
a. Generally found in the plane of the Milky Way.


b. These have a high abundance of upper main
sequence stars which indicates that these clusters
are very young.


c. Example:
The Pleiades
3) Globular Clusters: Larger star clusters
containing 100,000’s or millions of stars.
  a. Generally found outside the plane of the milky
     way.
  b. These clusters lack most upper main
     sequence stars indicating that they are much
       older then open clusters.


c. Example
  M92
4) HR Diagrams and Cluster age
  a. Zero-Age Main Sequence
    - When a star cluster first forms the stars
    somewhat evenly distributed across the
    main sequence.
b. Older-Main Sequence
  - Over time the higher mass stars burn through
  their fuel faster and die off.
  - So as time goes on, the stars located higher
  on the chart begin to leave the main sequence.
F. Estimating the Size of Stars
   1. Stefan-Boltzmann law
      a. Most stars cannot have their radius directly
      measured using geometry, and it must be measured
      indirectly.
      b. We know that as the temperature of a star goes up
      so does the luminosity
            L      T4


      c. We also know that the larger a star is the more
      energy it gives off. Thus…
            L      r2
d. By combining these proportionalities…
   Luminosity           Radius2 X Temperature4


e. Remove the proportionality and rearrange…


      R‫√( = סּ‬L ‫/)סּ‬T2‫סּ‬


Example: Betelgeuse is 0.517x the temperature of the sun
  and is 80x as luminous. How many times the size of the
  sun is the star? If the suns radius is 696,000km then how
  many km is this star?
2) Applying Radius to the HR
Diagram
    a. Because the HR diagram is
                     a chart of
temperatures vs
luminosities we can estimate
 the relative size of stars based
 on their position on the diagram.


- Up to the right is larger


- Down towards the left is smaller
H. Forces in a Forming Star
  1. There are two forces acting on Stars
     a. The force of gravity
          - Acts to cause the star to contract
          - Caused by the large amount of
             Hydrogen Gas
     b. Internal Pressure Forces
          - Resists the force of gravity
          - Caused by:
                * Heat generated within the star
                * Repulsion between particles of
                   like charge.
1. Two forces (a balancing act)
  c. When the cloud of gas and dust first starts
     forming, the force of gravity GREATLY
     overpowers the internal pressure force.
       - This causes the cloud to start
          contracting.
1. Two forces (a balancing act)
  d. As the cloud gets smaller the force of
     gravity remains the same. But as the
     molecules get closer together pressure
     builds up inside the cloud to resist gravity.
          - This causes contraction to greatly
             slow.
1. Two forces (a balancing act)
  e. Eventually the when the protostar forms
     the pressure of the gas almost balances
     out the force of gravity.
       - This is the slowest part of contraction.
1. Two forces (a balancing act)
  f. When the star reaches the main sequence,
     and begins fusing hydrogen, the interior
     pressure force perfectly balances gravity
     and contraction stops
       - This is called Hydrostatic Equilibrium.
       - Stars on the main sequence DO NOT
          CHANGE RADIUS
I. Powering Stars (The Proton-Proton Chain)
           1. Main Sequence Stars
              a. Use Hydrogen as a source of fuel
     +        b. The hydrogen is fused together to form
-                Helium.
              c. The process of combining Hydrogen
                 together into Helium is called The Proton-
                    Proton Chain.
          d. Remember that at the center of the sun it
               is hot enough to strip the electrons off
    of+           any atoms. Thus creating a whole
    bunch              of floating protons.
Proton-Proton Chain: Step 1
  Two Protons (1H) combine to form a Hydrogen
  & a Neutron (2H), a positron, and a neutrino.
                                      -

              +                   +       +
    +



          H + 1H  2H + e+ + v
          1
Proton-Proton Chain: Step 2
    Two Heavy-Hydrogen's (2H) combine to form
    Light Helium (3He) and a Gamma Ray.
        +


+                                  +       γ
                                    +



           2
            H + 2H  3He + γ
Proton-Proton Chain: Step 3
   Two Light-Helium’s (3He) combine to make a
stable Helium (4He) and two Hydrogen Ions (1H).

            +                               +
        +


+                                   +             +
 +                                   +



        He + 3He 4He + 1H + 1H
        3
2) Energy releasing steps
           a. In step 2 we release a gamma ray.
γ
              - This is just high energy light!
              - It gets absorbed and remitted on its trip to
              the surface of the sun, so when it emerges it
              has less energy.


        b. In step 1 we created a positron.
           - This is Antimatter. Essentially an electron with a
+          positive charge.
           - Eventually it will contact a normal-matter
           electron and they will annihilate each other
    -      releasing massive amounts of energy.

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Star formation

  • 1. X. Star Formation A. Interstellar Medium: The collective name for all matter located between stars. 1. Made up of Gas & Dust a. Gases produces absorption lines in the star light that passes through it. Absorption lines b. Dust acts to block light at most frequencies above infrared. Thus the light from stars appear redder then they would otherwise. This is called Reddening
  • 2. B. Density & Composition 1) On average there is one atom of interstellar material per square centimeter. VERY low density. 2) The gas is composed of 90% Hydrogen and 9% Helium. 3) The composition of interstellar dust, is mostly unknown, but is believed to be heavier elements and “dirty” ices.
  • 3. 4) Interstellar Clouds: are areas of higher then average density of gas and dust.
  • 4. 5) Types of Interstellar Clouds a. Emission Nebula: HOT clouds of gas and dust that give off light. - At or near the center of an emission nebula is located a hot O or B type star. - These are areas where new stars are forming. - Can be several hundred light years across.
  • 5. 5) Types of Interstellar Clouds b. Dark Dust Clouds: COOL clouds in space that do not radiate light. - Tend to be denser then emission nebulae - Range from the size of our solar system to a few parsecs across. - are not the site of new star formation
  • 6. B. Formation of Sun-Like Stars - Over time the atoms & molecules in interstellar clouds are affected by each others gravity and they clump together which leads to star formation. Stage 1) An Interstellar Cloud a. Part of an interstellar cloud begins to collapse. b. This cloud is typically 1000’s of times the mass of the sun and 10’s of parsecs across.
  • 7. Stage 1) An Interstellar Cloud c. As it shrinks it begins to fracture into smaller parts. d. Each part of the could can give rise to a new star.
  • 8. Stage 2) Contracting Cloud Fragment a. At stage 2, the piece of cloud is about 100x the size of our solar system and has about two solar masses worth of material. b. Even though it is continuing to contract, most of the heat is still lost to interstellar space because the molecules of the cloud are still very far apart.
  • 9. Stage 3) Contracting Cloud Fragment a. At stage 3 the cloud has contracted into a sphere roughly the diameter of our solar system. b. The interior of the cloud has heated to over 10,000K and a protostar forms at the center.
  • 10. Stage 4) Protostar Evolution a. The protostar has shrunk to roughly the size of Mercury’s orbit. b. The core of the protostar is about 1,000,000K - Hot enough to strip electrons off of the atoms but not hot enough to start fusion.
  • 11. Stage 5) Protostar Evolution a. The star heats to a point nearing that needed for fusion. b. The star is VERY bright but also very cool. c. The brightness of the star comes from energy released as the star contracts d. At this point we can plot our protostar on the HR diagram.
  • 12. Stages 6 & 7) New formed Star a. At stage 6 the core has heated enough to begin fusing hydrogen atoms into helium, but is still twice the size of the sun. b. At stage 7 the star has completed contracting and has reached the main sequence.
  • 13. X. Star Formation C. Formation of Other Sized Stars 1. More Massive stars – a. Form from more massive cloud fragments. b. Are found “higher” on the main sequence then the sun. c. This means that classes O-F are, generally, more massive than the sun.
  • 14. C. Formation of Other Sized Stars 2. Less Massive stars – a. Form from less massive cloud fragments. b. Are found “lower” on the main sequence then the sun. c. This means that classes K & M are, generally, less massive than the sun.
  • 15. D. Formation Tracks 1. Remember that we can plot proto stars on the HR diagram and follow them through the stages of formation until they reach the main sequence (stage 7) 2. The shape of star forming tracks are the same but their position depends on their mass. a. higher for high mass b. lower for low mass
  • 16. E) The End Result (dun… Dun… DUN!!!) 1) The end result of cloud collapse is a Star Cluster. a. A star cluster is a group of stars that form the same collapsing cloud of gas and dust. b. These stars have similar characteristics. - Very close ages - Same initial composition - Similar distance from the earth c. This makes them ideal stellar laboratories for testing different theories of stellar evolution.
  • 17. 2) Open Clusters: Small star clusters a few pc across with 100’s to 10,000’s of stars. a. Generally found in the plane of the Milky Way. b. These have a high abundance of upper main sequence stars which indicates that these clusters are very young. c. Example: The Pleiades
  • 18. 3) Globular Clusters: Larger star clusters containing 100,000’s or millions of stars. a. Generally found outside the plane of the milky way. b. These clusters lack most upper main sequence stars indicating that they are much older then open clusters. c. Example M92
  • 19. 4) HR Diagrams and Cluster age a. Zero-Age Main Sequence - When a star cluster first forms the stars somewhat evenly distributed across the main sequence.
  • 20. b. Older-Main Sequence - Over time the higher mass stars burn through their fuel faster and die off. - So as time goes on, the stars located higher on the chart begin to leave the main sequence.
  • 21. F. Estimating the Size of Stars 1. Stefan-Boltzmann law a. Most stars cannot have their radius directly measured using geometry, and it must be measured indirectly. b. We know that as the temperature of a star goes up so does the luminosity L T4 c. We also know that the larger a star is the more energy it gives off. Thus… L r2
  • 22. d. By combining these proportionalities… Luminosity Radius2 X Temperature4 e. Remove the proportionality and rearrange… R‫√( = סּ‬L ‫/)סּ‬T2‫סּ‬ Example: Betelgeuse is 0.517x the temperature of the sun and is 80x as luminous. How many times the size of the sun is the star? If the suns radius is 696,000km then how many km is this star?
  • 23. 2) Applying Radius to the HR Diagram a. Because the HR diagram is a chart of temperatures vs luminosities we can estimate the relative size of stars based on their position on the diagram. - Up to the right is larger - Down towards the left is smaller
  • 24. H. Forces in a Forming Star 1. There are two forces acting on Stars a. The force of gravity - Acts to cause the star to contract - Caused by the large amount of Hydrogen Gas b. Internal Pressure Forces - Resists the force of gravity - Caused by: * Heat generated within the star * Repulsion between particles of like charge.
  • 25. 1. Two forces (a balancing act) c. When the cloud of gas and dust first starts forming, the force of gravity GREATLY overpowers the internal pressure force. - This causes the cloud to start contracting.
  • 26. 1. Two forces (a balancing act) d. As the cloud gets smaller the force of gravity remains the same. But as the molecules get closer together pressure builds up inside the cloud to resist gravity. - This causes contraction to greatly slow.
  • 27. 1. Two forces (a balancing act) e. Eventually the when the protostar forms the pressure of the gas almost balances out the force of gravity. - This is the slowest part of contraction.
  • 28. 1. Two forces (a balancing act) f. When the star reaches the main sequence, and begins fusing hydrogen, the interior pressure force perfectly balances gravity and contraction stops - This is called Hydrostatic Equilibrium. - Stars on the main sequence DO NOT CHANGE RADIUS
  • 29. I. Powering Stars (The Proton-Proton Chain) 1. Main Sequence Stars a. Use Hydrogen as a source of fuel + b. The hydrogen is fused together to form - Helium. c. The process of combining Hydrogen together into Helium is called The Proton- Proton Chain. d. Remember that at the center of the sun it is hot enough to strip the electrons off of+ any atoms. Thus creating a whole bunch of floating protons.
  • 30. Proton-Proton Chain: Step 1 Two Protons (1H) combine to form a Hydrogen & a Neutron (2H), a positron, and a neutrino. - + + + + H + 1H  2H + e+ + v 1
  • 31. Proton-Proton Chain: Step 2 Two Heavy-Hydrogen's (2H) combine to form Light Helium (3He) and a Gamma Ray. + + + γ + 2 H + 2H  3He + γ
  • 32. Proton-Proton Chain: Step 3 Two Light-Helium’s (3He) combine to make a stable Helium (4He) and two Hydrogen Ions (1H). + + + + + + + + He + 3He 4He + 1H + 1H 3
  • 33. 2) Energy releasing steps a. In step 2 we release a gamma ray. γ - This is just high energy light! - It gets absorbed and remitted on its trip to the surface of the sun, so when it emerges it has less energy. b. In step 1 we created a positron. - This is Antimatter. Essentially an electron with a + positive charge. - Eventually it will contact a normal-matter electron and they will annihilate each other - releasing massive amounts of energy.