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Stellar Evolution The Birth, Life, and Death of Stars

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Stellar Evolution. The Birth, Life, and Death of Stars. The Universe. Everything All matter, space, and time The Universe is 13.72 billion years old. Cosmology. The study of the origin of the Universe. The Sun. An average sized Star About 4.5 billion years old. What is a Solar System?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Stellar Evolution

Stellar Evolution

The Birth, Life, and Death of Stars

Page 2: Stellar Evolution

The Universe

• Everything– All matter,

space, and time

• The Universe is 13.72 billion years old

Page 3: Stellar Evolution

Cosmology

• The study of the origin of the Universe

Page 4: Stellar Evolution

The Sun• An average sized Star• About 4.5 billion years old

Page 5: Stellar Evolution

What is a Solar System?• A star and everything that revolves around it• Our Solar System is about ___ years old

Page 6: Stellar Evolution

A light-year

• A unit of distance, not time

• The distance light travels in one year

• 6 Trillion miles

Page 7: Stellar Evolution

Distance to Sun

• 93 million miles

• 8.3 light-minutes

Page 8: Stellar Evolution

Proxima Centauri

• The closest star to our sun

• About 4 light-years away

Page 9: Stellar Evolution

Galaxies

• Stars are not evenly distributed in space.

• They are in groups called Galaxies.

Page 10: Stellar Evolution

Types and Sizes of Galaxies• Types: Elliptical, Spiral, Irregular• Two sizes

– Giant– Dwarf

Page 11: Stellar Evolution

The Milky Way Galaxy

• 100,000 light years across• Has Hundreds of billions of stars

Page 12: Stellar Evolution

Galaxy Clusters

• A Group of Galaxies

• Local Group• 2 mly across• 3 large &

about 2 dozen dwarf

• Andromeda 2.2 mly

Page 13: Stellar Evolution

Galaxy Superclusters

• A cluster of clusters

• The Local (Virgo) Supercluster

• 100 clusters• 100 mly across

Page 14: Stellar Evolution

Nearest Superclusters

Page 15: Stellar Evolution

Galaxy Superclusters

Page 16: Stellar Evolution

The Visible Universe

Page 17: Stellar Evolution

How big is the Universe?

• The visible universe is 28 billion light years in diameter.

• Why is that all that is visible?

• The entire universe may be much bigger

Page 18: Stellar Evolution

How many Galaxies are there?• Hundreds

of billions• Each has

hundreds of billions of stars

Page 19: Stellar Evolution
Page 20: Stellar Evolution

Edwin Hubble

• 1920’s• Discovered

other galaxies• Discovered

the Universe is expanding

Page 21: Stellar Evolution

The Expanding Universe

• The Red Shift

• Doppler effect

Page 22: Stellar Evolution

The Doppler Effect

Page 23: Stellar Evolution

The Big Bang

• Tremendous explosion started the expansion of the universe

• All of the matter and energy of the universe was contained at one point

Page 24: Stellar Evolution
Page 25: Stellar Evolution

Characteristics of Stars

Page 26: Stellar Evolution

Star Properties and Classification

• Color• Temperature• Age• Apparent

brightness• Distance

from Earth

Page 27: Stellar Evolution

Star Brightness• Apparent Magnitude

– How bright it looks from Earth

• Absolute Magnitude– How much light it

actually produces

Page 28: Stellar Evolution

Apparent Magnitude (Brightness)

• Depends on actual brightness (luminosity) and distance away

Page 29: Stellar Evolution

Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram

• Absolute Magnitude (Brightness

)

Compares a star’s Temperature (color) and its …

Page 30: Stellar Evolution

Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram

Page 31: Stellar Evolution

Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram

• Things to Know• Color depends on temperature

– Blue, White, Yellow, Orange, Red

• The higher the Temperature the Brighter the Star (if in the main sequence)– White Dwarfs and Red Giants are exceptions

• The Sun is in the main sequence (90% of stars)

Page 32: Stellar Evolution

Star Relative Size• The Sun is an averaged sized star

Page 33: Stellar Evolution

Stellar Evolution

The Formation and Life Cycle of Stars

Page 34: Stellar Evolution

Star Formation

• Originate in gas clouds in space called Nebula

• Mostly Hydrogen

• Gravity pulls it together

Page 35: Stellar Evolution

Nebula

• The contraction heats the gases

• When it gets hot enough (27 million degrees) nuclear fusion starts

Page 36: Stellar Evolution

Nuclear Fusion

• The reaction produce

s heat energy,

which causes

more fusion

• Hydrogen nuclei are fused to make helium

Page 37: Stellar Evolution

How big is a Nebula?

• The Orion Nebula is about 2.5 light years across

Page 38: Stellar Evolution
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Old Age

• When the hydrogen runs low

• Contractions make more heat

• Causes nuclear fusion to make heavier elements

• Expansion results in a Red Giant

Page 41: Stellar Evolution

White Dwarf• When energy is used, it shrinks to make a white dwarf

Page 42: Stellar Evolution

Supernovas• Collapses abruptly

then explodes• Billions of times

brighter• Creates heavier

elements• Occurs only in very

massive stars

Page 43: Stellar Evolution

After a Supernova• The outer

layers are blasted into space to create a new nebula (starts the cycle over)

• The core collapses to form a neutron star

Page 44: Stellar Evolution

Neutron Star

• Left over after a supernova

• 1 teaspoon weighs billions of tons

Page 45: Stellar Evolution

Black Holes• A star

so dense, even light can not escape

Page 46: Stellar Evolution
Page 47: Stellar Evolution

Formation of Heavier Elements

• Elements heavier than hydrogen are formed by nuclear fusion in Stars

• Elements heavier then iron form during a Supernova

Page 48: Stellar Evolution

The End