Introduction To Astrophysics: Lecture 7: Stellar Life and Death
Introduction To Astrophysics: Lecture 7: Stellar Life and Death
Sunspot close-up
• The core: in the inner one third of its radius, nuclear fusion is taking
place, generating energy which heats the core to between five and
fifteen million degrees.
• The radiation zone: for the next one third energy transport is mostly
by radiation, bringing the temperature down to around one million
degrees.
• The convection zone: energy transport is primarily by convection,
with the temperature falling to just 5800K at the Sun’s surface.
• The photosphere: this is the surface where light escapes from.
• The chromosphere: this is the region above the visible surface of the
Sun, visible mainly during eclipses. It is heated to very high
temperatures by magnetic activity.
The lifetime of stars
For stars with mass up to about eight times the solar mass, the
outer layers of the star are eventually blown away as a
planetary nebula exposing the core of the star.
The core has too little mass to
overcome the support from
electron degeneracy pressure
and cannot collapse any further.
Nuclear reactions cease.
This core is known as a white
dwarf. It is initially very hot,
but cools and fades.
Computer simulation of a red giant star
Planetary nebulae
White Dwarfs
• Towards the lower end of the mass range, what’s left is a neutron
star. Neutron stars are ...
• Composed of neutrons. The intense force of gravity is so strong that
it forces electrons and protons together to form neutrons. Being
much more massive that electrons, these allow the star to become
even more dense.
• A neutron star is in effect a giant atomic nucleus!
• They spin quickly. Some emit radio waves and are known as
pulsars.
• They have masses up to about three times the Sun’s mass.
Computer animation of a pulsar in action
Black holes
• If the mass of the core that remains is more than about three solar
masses, even neutrons are not able to survive the gravitational
attraction. Gravitational collapse is so powerful that nothing, not
even light, can escape.
• Black holes can therefore only be identified by their gravitational
effects on nearby objects.
• We’ll explore the astrophysics of black holes in a later lecture.
Things to remember
• Compared to the main sequence stars that they evolve from, red
giants have:
cooler cores and cooler surfaces
cooler cores and hotter surfaces
hotter cores and cooler surfaces
hotter cores and hotter surfaces
Exercise
In its lifetime the Sun will consume approximately 10% of its Helium
(the core mass). How long will the Sun remain on the main-
sequence?