the life cycle of a star a really “hot” topic by samantha edgington

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The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

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Page 1: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Life Cycle of a Star

A Really “Hot” Topic

By Samantha Edgington

Page 2: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

Objectives

• Describe how stars are formed.

• Explain the concept of equilibrium.

• Define the “death” of a star.

• Identify the different types of stars.

• Describe how the process of nuclear fusion works within a star.

Page 3: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

What is a Nebula?• A nebula can be defined as a

thinly spread cloud of interstellar gas and dust.

• Some nebulae are the remains of a supernova explosion.– the death and collapse of a massive

star can cause this explosion, this means nebulae can be the remains of old, dead stars.

• Most nebulae are gravity-induced condensations of gases where protostars are born.

Page 4: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

How is a Protostar Formed?

• Inside a nebula, there are areas where gravity causes dust and gas to “clump” together.

• As these “clumps” gather more and more mass their gravitational pull increases, forcing more atoms together.

• This process is known as accretion, and the result is a protostar.

Page 5: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

How does a Protostar Become a Star?

• In order to comprehend this process, the concept of equilibrium must be understood.

• Equilibrium is in essence a balance.

• In the case of star formation this balance exists between gravity and gas pressure.

Page 6: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

Achieving Equilibrium

• First gravity pulls gas and dust inward towards the core of the prospective star.

• Inside the core, density and temperature increases as atomic collisions increase, causing a rise in gas pressure.

• Finally when gas pressure is equal to gravity, the protostar has reached equilibrium and is therefore reached a reasonably stable size.

Page 7: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Birth• Once the protostar has

achieved equilibrium one of two things occur:

If there is not a sufficient mass, it becomes a brown dwarf which is a “star” that doesn’t radiate much heat and light.

In the event it does contain an appropriate amount of matter, nuclear fusion begins and light is emitted.

Page 8: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Main Sequence• A star is basically a huge ball of gas undergoing

nuclear fusion.• The main sequence phase is where stars spend

the majority of their “life” by fusing hydrogen into helium.

• There are two types of main sequence stars:a red giant which is a large bright

star with a cool surface.a red dwarf which are very cool, faint

and small stars

Page 9: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Ending of Main Sequence• The star slowly shrinks over billions

of years as the hydrogen is used by fusion.

• The star’s temperature, density, and pressure at the core continues to increase.

• Once the hydrogen is depleted, the helium is fused into carbon, when this occurs the star has reached “old age”.

Page 10: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Death• There are one of two ways a star can die

depending on its size.

• If the star is of low mass, it expands its outer layers, creating nebulae and a white dwarf forms from the core.

• If it is of high mass, death occurs in a massive explosion known as a supernova, the remaining core then transforms into a neutron star or a black hole.

Page 11: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

What is a White Dwarf?

• They form from the core of a dead red giants that were too small to fuse carbon.

• Since they do not undergo fusion, they have no energy source and gradually fade.

• When they radiate away all of their energy they will theoretically become a black dwarf.

• Since white dwarfs cannot be older than the universe (13.7 billion years) no black dwarfs are currently in existence.

Page 12: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

What is a Supernova?

• They can form when the gravitational potential energy—created by a sudden gravitational collapse of a large red giant—heats and expels the star's outer layers, resulting in an explosion.

• Also, they can form when a white dwarf ignites carbon fusion, which results in a runaway nuclear fusion reaction and causes a supernova.

• Supernovae can be so immense that the energy produced can equal the energy the Sun creates over a time period of 10 billion years!

Page 13: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

What is a Neutron Star?

• A neutron star is formed as a result of a massive star being compressed.

• The core material, known as neutron degenerate matter, mostly consists of neutrons with a few protons and electrons.

• The gravity is so intense that if an object were to reach the surface it would disperse all of its subatomic particles and merge with the star!

• The matter is so dense that a teaspoon would weigh billions of tonnes!

• Some people view neutron stars as giant atoms.

Page 14: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

What is a Stellar Black Hole?

• If a collapsing star exceeds the maximum mass a neutron star can be it will develop into a stellar black hole.

• Black holes are extremely dense areas with a gravitational pull so powerful not even light can escape!

• What could be a reason why black holes are black?

Page 15: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

Chart of the Stars

Star Type Solar Mass Temperature (K) Color

Red Giant 10 - 15 2,500 - 3,500 orange - red

Red Dwarf 0.1 - 0.5 2,500 – 3,500 red

Blue Giant 10 - 15 ~30,000 blue - white

Brown Dwarf 0.013 - 0.084

~1,000 red

Yellow Dwarf 0.8 -1 5,300 - 6,000 white - yellow

White Dwarf < 1.4 4,000 - 150,000 white

Neutron Star 1.4 - 3 ~1,000,000 blue

Page 16: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Sun’s Life

• Now that a basic overview of a star’s life cycle has been covered, the details of the most important star’s life can be revealed.

• Can you guess what type of star the Sun is?

Page 17: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Sun in Main Sequence

• The Sun was born like any other star, out of a nebulae and into a protostar.

• It is now in its main sequence and can be classified as a yellow dwarf.

• The Star is about 4.57 billion years old, about halfway through its complete lifecycle.

Page 18: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

The Sun’s Death• Since the Sun is considerably smaller it will

not explode in a supernova.• Instead it is predicted that it will become a

red giant in about ~6 billion years.• When this occurs, all the water on earth will

be vaporized and life will cease to exist.• In the final phase the Sun will form a white

dwarf and slowly fade out of existence.

Page 19: The Life Cycle of a Star A Really “Hot” Topic By Samantha Edgington

Works Cited• www.dictionary.com

• aspire.cosmicray.org/labs/star_life/starlife_proto.html

• www.astro.keele.ac.uk/workx/starlife/StarpageS_26M.html

• http://www.telescope.org/pparc/res8.html

• www.antonine-education.co.uk

• www.darkstar1.co.uk

• www.pbs.org

• outreach.jach.hawaii.edu

• www.spaceflightnow.com

• wikipedia.org• www.cosmographica.com