Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are...

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Singing Spa ce Songs

Transcript of Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are...

Page 2: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

Betelgeuse

The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

Page 3: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

Colours • The colour of the star tells you how hot it is.

• Toaster - as the wires heat up to make your toast. The wires start as black, change to red and then to orange as the toaster gets hotter and hotter. This is where it usually stops.

• But were the wires to continue to get hotter still, their colour would change to:

Yellow White Blue-white

Page 4: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

Black Body

• It definitely is not black. Almost all of the photons of light that the sun produces in its core are absorbed by the sun's thin outer layer, the photosphere.

• Because it absorbs all the radiation that hits it, the photosphere of our sun and those of other stars behave like black bodies. The gases in the photosphere heat up until they reach a constant temperature. Then the star radiates light that looks a lot like that of a black body .

•Black bodies absorb all radiant energy that strikes it.

Page 5: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

Colour again• Though the light from the

black bodies peaks at wavelengths we can see, much of the light given off is at wavelengths above and below our visual range.

• The hottest black body (8000 K) produces mostly blue light and a lot more of it than the cooler ones. The height of the curve tells us how much light.

• The coolest black body (4000 K) produces mostly red light. It is so dim compared to the hottest (blue) black body that it hardly shows up on the plot.

Page 6: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

A powerful tool for investigating the stars! • The colour of a star tells us

its temperature.

• A star can appear brighter because it is closer.

• From the colour and intensity of the light, and the black body curves shown on the previous slide, we can tell how big the star must be for the light from all the surface patches to add up to the total light we see... and all without leaving the Earth!

Page 7: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

Oh, Be A Fine Guy / Gal Kiss Me!

High Temp Low Temp

Page 8: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

• Nuclear reactions begin in the core, converting H to He with the release of energy, the internal pressure is increased.

• The star enters the main sequence and is stable for a large part of its life.

Page 9: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?
Page 10: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

• The end, however, is inevitable. Gravity always wins.

Page 11: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

• Main sequence Star = it has reached Hydrostatic Equilibrium; it is no longer being compressed by gravity or blown apart by the intense temperatures and pressures in the core.

What Happens to Low Mass Stars (< 8 solar masses)?

Page 12: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

1. Red Giant • Hydrogen in core all changed to helium

• Core collapses

• Outer layers expand (due to energy from hydrogen shell).

Page 13: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

2. Red Giant wobbles!• While the outer atmosphere

is expanding, the core (which is not being heated) contracts. Temp ↑again.

• He → C and O. But He gets used up quickly, & gravitational collapse continues.

• Again temp rises so that He in a shell surrounding the core starts to fuse. This shell expands as the H shell at larger radial distance continues to fuse into He.

• The star's outer layer expands again and the star repeats its rise to a red giant state. The shells continue to turn on and off during this stage.

Betelgeuse

Orion

Page 14: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

3. Planetary Nebula forms

• Helium is used up and core collapses to become a white dwarf • Outer layers are ejected completely • A planetary nebula (lit by white dwarf) is formed

Cat’s Eye Nebula

Page 15: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

4. White Dwarf• No fuel = no radiation

pressure outwards → Gravity squeezes star down to small size.

• Matter that makes up a white dwarf is like nothing you've ever seen before. It's as if the mass of an elephant were compressed into the space of a marble.

• You would weigh about 600,000 N on the surface!

5. Brown Dwarf forms

Page 16: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

• These stars enter main sequence as hot white, blue-white or blue stars.

• Their lifetimes on the main sequence are much shorter than low mass stars.

What Happens to High Mass Stars (> 8 solar masses)

Page 17: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

1. Red Supergiant• Blue supergiant

expands and cools. • Gravitational

collapse raises temp. of core. At 1billion0C, C → N, Mg & O.

• These elements fuse to produce even heavier elements.

Rigel

Page 18: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

2. Supernova • Nuclear fusion produces Fe core.

• Radiation pressure loses to gravity & core collapses catastrophically inward.

10 Years after the explosion

Green = Oxygen

Red = Sulfur

Interstellar medium enriched with heavy elements

•In less than 1/10 of a second the core of the star is crushed into a sphere only 100 km across. The gravitational energy released in this fraction of a second is 100 times greater than the sun releases in its entire 10 billion-year lifetime.

Page 19: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

3a. Neutron

Star

• All that is left is the central core. It now contains a mass between 1.4 and 3.0 times the sun's mass but condensed into a volume 10- to 20- km across - roughly the size of a small town on Earth.

• The electrons and protons have been squeezed together to form neutrons and nearly all of the space in the atom has been removed.

Page 20: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

3b. Black Hole

• If core > 3 times the sun's mass, radiation pressure cannot halt the gravitational collapse. The core will continue to collapse to form a black hole.

There is so much mass compressed into such a small volume that gravity prevents even light from escaping the black hole. Since no light can ever reach your eyes from the collapsed core, it appears black, hence the name.

A giant disk of gas and dust being drawn into the black hole is heated near the event horizon and is made visible through the light that it emits. The disk is thought to be about 300 light years across.

Page 21: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?
Page 22: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

• The largest stars in the galaxy are found near the top

• The smallest stars near the bottom.

• The bluest stars appear on the left

• The reddest stars on the right.

Page 23: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?

H-R Diagram• Stars near the top of

the chart are the brightest

• At the bottom are the faintest stars.

• This is not how the stars appear to you gazing into the night sky. These brightnesses are how the stars would appear if they were all moved to the same distance away from the earth.

• The hottest (bluest) stars are plotted at the far left.

• The coolest (reddest) stars appear at the far right.

Page 24: Singing Space Songs. Betelgeuse The sun and Betelgeuse are both made mostly of hydrogen so why are they different colours?