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Stellar Evolution Describe how a protostar becomes a star. Explain how a main-sequence star generates energy. Describe the evolution of a star after its main-sequence stage.

Stellar Evolution

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Stellar Evolution. Describe how a protostar becomes a star. Explain how a main-sequence star generates energy. Describe the evolution of a star after its main-sequence stage. Classifying Stars. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Stellar Evolution

Stellar Evolution•Describe how a protostar becomes a star.

• Explain how a main-sequence star generates energy.

•Describe the evolution of a star after its main-sequence stage.

Page 2: Stellar Evolution

Classifying Stars• Main sequence the location on the H-R diagram where most stars lie; it has a diagonal pattern from the lower right to the upper left.

• One way scientists classify stars is by plotting the surface temperatures of stars against their luminosity. The H-R diagram is the graph that illustrates the resulting pattern.

• Astronomers use the H-R diagram to describe the life cycles of stars. Most stars fall within a band that runs diagonally through the middle of the H-R diagram. These stars are main sequence stars.

Page 3: Stellar Evolution

Classifying Stars

Page 4: Stellar Evolution

Star Formation (1st stage)

• Nebula a large cloud of gas and dust in interstellar space; a region in space where stars are born.

• 1. A star beings in a nebula.

• 2. When the nebula is compressed, some of the particles move close to each other and are pulled together by gravity.

• 3. As described in Newton’s law of universal gravitation, as gravity pulls particles of the nebula closer together, the gravitational pull of the particles on each other increases.

• 4. As more particles come together, regions of dense matter begin to build up within the cloud.

Page 5: Stellar Evolution

Star FormationProtostars

• 5. As gravity makes dense regions within a nebula more compact, these regions spin and shrink and begin to form a flattened disk. The disk has a central concentration of matter called a protostar.

• 6. The protostar continues to contract and increase in temperature for several million years. Eventually the gas in the region plasma.

• Plasma – when the gas becomes so hot that its electrons are stripped from their parent atoms, it becomes a separate state of matter.

Page 6: Stellar Evolution

Star Formation (1st Stage)

The Birth of a Star

• A protostar’s temperature continually increases until it reaches about 10,000,000°C.

• At this temperature, nuclear fusion begins.

• The onset of nuclear fusion marks the birth of a star. Once this process begins, it can continue for billions of years.

Page 7: Stellar Evolution

Star FormationA Delicate Balancing Act

• The outward pressures of the radiation and the hot gas resist the inward pull of gravity.

• This equilibrium makes the star stable in size.

Page 8: Stellar Evolution

Star Formation, continuedReading Check

How does the pressure from fusion and hot gas interact with the force of gravity to maintain a star’s stability?

The forces balance each other and keep the star in equilibrium. As gravity increases the pressure on the matter within a star, the rate of fusion increases. This increase in fusion causes a rise in gas pressure. As a result, the energy from the increased fusion and gas pressure generates outward pressure that balances the force of gravity.

Page 9: Stellar Evolution

The Main-Sequence Stage (2nd Stage)

• The second and longest stage in the life of a star is the main-sequence stage. During this stage, energy continues to be generated in the core of the star as hydrogen fuses into helium.

• A star that has a mass about the same as the sun’s mass stays on the main sequence for about 10 billion years.

• Scientists estimate that over a period of almost 5 billion years, the sun has converted only 5% of its original hydrogen nuclei into helium nuclei.

Page 10: Stellar Evolution

Leaving the Main Sequence (3rd stage)

Giant Stars

•Giant - a very large and bright star whose hot core has used most of its hydrogen.

• A star enters its third stage when almost all of the hydrogen atoms within its core have fused into helium atoms.

• A star’s shell of gases grows cooler as it expands. As the gases in the outer shell become cooler, they begin to glow with a reddish color. These stars are known as giants.

Page 11: Stellar Evolution

Leaving the Main Sequence

Supergiants

• Main-sequence stars that are more massive than the sun will become larger than giants in their third stage.

• These highly luminous stars are called supergiants. These stars appear along the top of the H-R diagram.

Page 12: Stellar Evolution

Leaving the Main Sequence, continuedReading Check

Where are giants and supergiants found on the H-R diagram?

Giants and supergiants appear in the upper right part of the H-R diagram.

Page 13: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of a Sunlike Star

Planetary Nebulas

• As the star’s outer gases drift away, the remaining core heats these expanding gases.

• The gases appear as a planetary nebula, a cloud of gas that forms around a sunlike star that is dying.

Page 14: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of a Sunlike StarWhite Dwarfs

• As a planetary nebula disperses, gravity causes the remaining matter in the star to collapse inward.

• The matter collapses until it cannot be pressed further together.

• A hot, extremely dense core of matter - a white dwarf - is left. White dwarfs shine for billions of years before they cool completely.

• The gases appear as a planetary nebula, a cloud of gas that forms around a sunlike star that is dying.

Page 15: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of a Sunlike StarNovas and Supernovas

•Nova - a star that suddenly becomes brighter

• Some white dwarfs revolve around red giants. When this happens, the gravity of the whit dwarf may capture gases from the red giant.

• As these gases accumulate on the surface of the white dwarf, pressure begins to build up.

• This pressure may cause large explosions. These explosions are called novas.

Page 16: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of a Sunlike StarNovas and Supernovas

• A white dwarf may also become a supernova, which is a star that has such a tremendous explosion that it blows itself apart.

• The explosions of supernovas completely destroy the white dwarf star and may destroy much of the red giant.

Page 17: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of Massive Stars

Supernovas in Massive Stars

• Massive stars become supernovas as part of their life cycle.

• After the supergiant stage, the star collapses, producing such high temperatures that nuclear fusion begins again.

• When nuclear fusion stops, the star’s core begins to collapse under its own gravity. This causes the outer layers to explode outward with tremendous force.

Page 18: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of Massive Stars, continuedReading Check

What causes a supergiant star to explode as a supernova?

Giants and supergiants appear in the upper right part of the H-R diagram.

Page 19: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of Massive Stars

Neutron Stars

• neutron star a star that has collapsed under gravity to the point that the electrons and protons have smashed together to form neutrons

• Stars more massive than the sun do not become white dwarfs.

• After a star explodes as a supernova, the core may contract into a neutron star.

Page 20: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of Massive Stars

Page 21: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of Massive Stars

Pulsars

• pulsar a rapidly spinning neutron star that emits pulses of radio and optical energy

• Some neutron stars emit a beam of radio waves that sweeps across space and are detectable here on Earth.

• These stars are called pulsars. For each pulse detected on Earth, we know that the star has rotated within that period.

Page 22: Stellar Evolution

The Final Stages of Massive StarsBlack Holes

•Black hole - an object so massive and dense that even light cannot escape its gravity

•Some massive stars produce leftovers too massive to become a stable neutron star.

•These stars contract, and the force of the contraction leaves a black hole.