Oas351 Space Science Unit 4 Notes
Oas351 Space Science Unit 4 Notes
The structure of a star can often be thought of as a series of thin nested shells,
somewhat like an onion.
A star during most of its life is a main-sequence star, which consists of a core,
radiative and convective zones, a photosphere, a chromosphere and a corona. The core
is where all the nuclear fusion takes place to power a star.
In the radiative zone, energy from these reactions is transported outward by
radiation, like heat from a light bulb. while in the convective zone, energy is
transported by the roiling hot gases, like hot air from a hairdryer. Massive stars that
are more than several times the mass of the sun is convective in their cores and
radiative in their outer layers, while stars comparable to the sun or less in mass are
radiative in their cores and convective in their outer layers. Intermediate-mass stars of
spectral type A may be radiative throughout.
After those zones come the part of the star that radiates visible light, the
photosphere, which is often referred to as the surface of the star. After that is the
chromosphere, a layer that looks reddish because of all the hydrogen found there.
Finally, the outermost part of a star's atmosphere is the corona, which if super-hot
might be linked with convection in the outer layers.
4.3 KEY CHARACTERISTICS OF STAR
a) Brightness
Astronomers describe star brightness in terms of magnitude and luminosity.
The magnitude of a star is based on a scale more than 2,000 years old, devised by
Greek astronomer Hipparchus around 125 BC, he numbered groups of stars based on
their brightness as seen from Earth the brightest stars were called first magnitude stars,
the next brightest were the second magnitude, and so on up to sixth magnitude, the
faintest visible ones.
b) Colour
Stars come in a range of colors, from reddish to yellowish to blue. The color of
a star depends on surface temperature. A star might appear to have a single color, but
actually emits a broad spectrum of colors, potentially including everything from radio
waves and infrared rays to ultraviolet beams and gamma rays. Different elements or
compounds absorb and emit different colors or wavelengths of light, and by studying a
star's spectrum, one can divine what its composition might be.
c) Surface temperature
Astronomers measure star temperatures in a unit known as the kelvin, with a
temperature of zero K ("absolute zero") equalling minus 273.15 degrees C, or minus
459.67 degrees F. Specifically, the luminosity of a star is proportional to temperature
to the fourth power.
d) Size
Astronomers generally measure the size of stars in terms of the radius of our
sun. For instance, Alpha Centauri A has a radius of 1.05 solar radii (the plural of
radius). Stars range in size from neutron stars, which can be only 12 miles (20
kilometers) wide, to supergiants roughly 1,000 times the diameter of the sun.
The size of a star affects its brightness. Specifically, luminosity is proportional
to radius squared. For instance, if two stars had the same temperature, if one star was
twice as wide as the other one, the former would be four times as bright as the latter.
e) Mass
Astronomers represent the mass of a star in terms of the solar mass, the mass of
our sun. For instance, Alpha Centauri A is 1.08 solar masses. Stars with similar
masses might not be similar in size because they have different densities. For instance,
Sirius B is roughly the same mass as the sun but is 90,000 times as dense, and so is
only a fiftieth its diameter.
f) Magnetic field
Stars are spinning balls of roiling, electrically charged gas, and thus typically
generate magnetic fields. When it comes to the sun, researchers have discovered its
magnetic field can become highly concentrated in small areas, creating features
ranging from sunspots to spectacular eruptions known as flares and coronal mass
ejections.
g) Metallicity
The metallicity of a star measures the number of "metals" it has that is, any
element heavier than helium. Three generations of stars may exist based on
metallicity. Astronomers have not yet discovered any of what should be the oldest
generation, Population III stars born in a universe without "metals."
The life cycles of stars follow patterns based mostly on their initial mass. These
include intermediate-mass stars such as the sun, with half to eight times the mass of
the sun, high-mass stars that are more than eight solar masses, and low-mass stars a
tenth to half a solar mass in size. Objects smaller than a tenth of a solar mass do not
have enough gravitational pull to ignite nuclear fusion some might become failed stars
known as brown dwarfs.
An intermediate-mass star begins with a cloud that takes about 100,000 years
to collapse into a protostar with a surface temperature of about 6,750 degrees F (3,725
degrees C. After hydrogen fusion starts, the result is a T-Tauri star, a variable star that
fluctuates in brightness. This star continues to collapse for roughly 10 million years
until its expansion due to energy generated by nuclear fusion is balanced by its
contraction from gravity, after which point it becomes a main-sequence star that gets
all its energy from hydrogen fusion in its core.
The greater the mass of such a star, the more quickly it will use its hydrogen
fuel and the shorter it stays on the main sequence. After all the hydrogen in the core is
fused into helium, the star changes rapidly without nuclear radiation to resist it,
gravity immediately crushes matter down into the star's core, quickly heating the star.
This causes the star's outer layers to expand enormously and to cool and glow red as
they do so, rendering the star a red giant.
Helium starts fusing together in the core, and once the helium is gone, the core
contracts and becomes hotter, once more expanding the star but making it bluer and
brighter than before, blowing away its outermost layers. After the expanding shells of
gas fade, the remaining core is left, a white dwarf that consists mostly of carbon and
oxygen with an initial temperature of roughly 180,000 degrees F (100,000 degrees C).
Since white dwarves have no fuel left for fusion, they grow cooler and cooler over
billions of years to become black dwarves too faint to detect. Our sun should leave the
main sequence in about 5 billion years, according to Live Science.
A high-mass star forms and dies quickly. These stars form from protostars in
just 10,000 to 100,000 years. While on the main sequence, they are hot and blue, some
1,000 to 1 million times as luminous as the sun and are roughly 10 times wider. When
they leave the main sequence, they become a bright red supergiant and eventually
become hot enough to fuse carbon into heavier elements. After some 10,000 years of
such fusion, the result is an iron core roughly 3,800 miles (6,000 km) wide, and since
any more fusion would consume energy instead of liberating it, the star is doomed, as
its nuclear radiation can no longer resist the force of gravity.
Then a star reaches a mass of more than 1.4 solar masses, electron pressure
cannot support the core against further collapse, according to NASA. The result is a
supernova. Gravity causes the core to collapse, making the core temperature rise to
nearly 18 billion degrees F (10 billion degrees C), breaking the iron down into
neutrons and neutrinos. In about one second, the core shrinks to about six miles (10
km) wide and rebounds just like a rubber ball that has been squeezed, sending a shock
wave through the star that causes fusion to occur in the outlying layers. The star then
explodes in a so-called Type II supernova.
If the remaining stellar core was less than roughly three solar masses large, it
becomes a neutron star made up nearly entirely of neutrons, and rotating neutron
stars that beam out detectable radio pulses are known as pulsars. If the stellar core was
larger than about three solar masses, no known force can support it against its own
gravitational pull, and it collapses to form a black hole.
Class O: It includes bluish white stars with surface temperatures typically of 25,000–
50,000 K (although a few O-type stars with vastly greater temperatures have been
described); lines of ionized helium appear in the spectra.
Class B: These stars typically range from 10,000 K to 25,000 K and are also bluish
white but show neutral helium lines.
Class A: The surface temperatures of A-type stars range from 7,400 K to about 10,000
K; lines of hydrogen are prominent, and these stars are white.
Class F: stars are yellow-white, reach 6,000–7,400 K, and display many spectral lines
caused by metals.
Class G: These are yellow, with surface temperatures of 5,000–6,000 K. Sun is also
this kind of star
Class K: stars are yellow to orange, at about 3,500–5,000 K.
Class M: The stars are red, at about 3,000 K, with titanium oxide prominent in their
spectra.
L brown dwarfs have temperatures between about 1,500 and 2,500 K and have
spectral lines caused by alkali metals such as rubidium and sodium and
metallic compounds like iron hydride.
T brown dwarfs have prominent methane absorption in their spectra and
temperatures between about 800 and 1,500 K.
Y brown dwarfs are cooler than 800 K and have spectral lines
from ammonia and water.
On the diagram stars are ranked from bottom to top in order of decreasing
magnitude (increasing brightness) and from right to left by increasing temperature
(spectral class). Stars of the galactic arm in which the Sun is located tend to fall into
distinct regions on the diagram. The group called the main sequence extends in a
rough diagonal from the upper left of the diagram (hot, bright stars) to the lower right
(dim and cool).
Large, bright, though cool, stars called giants and supergiants appear in the
upper right, and the white dwarfs, dim, small, and hot, lie in the lower left. The Sun
lies near the middle of the main sequence, and stars spend most of their lives on the
main sequence.
As stars burn up the hydrogen in their cores into helium, they become
more luminous and cooler (because they have expanded) and therefore move off the
main sequence into the upper right region of the giants and supergiants. The point at
which stars move off the main sequence can be used to give the age of star clusters,
because stars at the lower end of the main sequence take longer to burn their hydrogen
into helium than stars at the upper end. The most massive stars explode
in supernovas. Stars of a few solar masses eject their outer layers as planetary
nebulae, which have a hot, luminous central star found in the upper left of the
diagram. Stars like the Sun burn down to cool white dwarfs, which are found in the
bottom left of the diagram.
1) Intrinsic Variables
These are stars which vary their light output, hence their brightness, by some
change within the star itself. They are an extremely important and useful group of
stars to astronomers as they provide a wealth of information about the internal
structure of stars and models of stellar evolution. Intrinsic variables are further
classified as pulsating stars and eruptive (cataclysmic variables).
a) Eclipsing binaries
They are regarded as variable too in that as one of the component stars is
eclipsed by the other, the total brightness of the system decreases. The light curves
produced by eclipsing binaries show distinctive periodic minima.
b) Rotating Variables
Our Sun sometimes has sunspots visible on its surface. These cooler regions
appear darker than the surrounding areas. As the Sun rotates the sunspots appear to
move across its surface. If we view a side of the Sun with a lot of sunspots. As a star
with star spots rotates, its brightness changes slightly. Stars exhibiting such behaviour
are called rotating variables.
A star ends up at the end of its life depends on the mass it was born with. Stars
that have a lot of mass may end their lives as black holes or neutron stars. A low or
medium mass star (with mass less than about 8 times the mass of our Sun) will
become a white dwarf.
A white dwarf is stellar core left behind after a dying star has exhausted their
nuclear fuel and expelled it outer layer, creating a planetary nebula. Only the hot core
of the star remains. This core becomes a very hot white dwarf, with a temperature
exceeding 100,000 Kelvin. Unless it is accreting matter from a nearby star, the white
dwarf cools down over the next billion years or so.
A typical white dwarf is half as massive as the Sun, yet only slightly bigger
than Earth. An Earth-sized white dwarf has a density of 1 x 109 kg/m3. Earth itself has
an average density of only 5.4 x 103 kg/m3. That means a white dwarf is 200,000 times
as dense as Earth. This makes white dwarfs one of the densest collections of matter,
surpassed only by neutron stars.
In 2013 Hubble found signs of Earth-like planets in the atmospheres of a pair
of white dwarf stars roughly 150 light-years away and only 625 million years old.
Hubble's spectroscopic observations identified silicon in the atmospheres of the two
white dwarfs, a major ingredient of the rocky material that forms Earth and other
terrestrial planets in the Solar System. Silicon may have come from asteroids that
were shredded by the white dwarfs’ gravity when they veered too close to the stars.
The rocky debris likely formed a ring around the dead stars, which then funnelled the
material inwards.
b) Neutron Star
Neutron stars are the remains of the cores of massive stars that have reached
the end of their lives. They are one of the two possible evolutionary endpoints of
the most massive stars, the other being black holes. The densest stellar objects,
apart from perhaps, whatever exists at the heart of a black hole, neutron stars are some
of the universe's most extreme objects.
The life of a star, no matter its size, is a balancing act between the inward
"push" of gravity and the outward push provided by photons generated as they
conduct nuclear fusion, the forging of heavy atomic nuclei from light nuclei, at their
cores. When stars run out of hydrogen to fuse into helium, they reach the end of
their main sequence of nuclear-fuel-burning lives. The outward energy ceases, and
gravity wins out, causing the core of the star to collapse in on itself. As this happens,
nuclear fusion in the outer shell of the star continues and this causes these outer layers
to "puff out." These shed outer layers cool around the still collapsing core, which, if it
is massive enough, will begin a new round of nuclear fusion, forging helium into
heavier elements like carbon.
Even this heavy element isn't dense enough to prevent massive cores from
further collapse. As this occurs the gravitational pressure is so intense that the
negatively-charged electrons and positively-charged protons that comprise the iron
nuclei in this stellar core are crushed together, creating a sea of uncharged, or
neutral neutrons.
Some massive stellar cores are at this point saved from further collapse by a
quantum phenomenon called "neutron degeneracy pressure," which occurs when such
a density is reached that neutrons can no longer be packed any closer together, leaving
them as neutron stars.
The collapse of massive stellar cores results in an object that has from one to
two times the mass of the sun, but only has a width of between 6 and 12 miles (10 and
20 kilometers). Imagine the sun reduced in size until it is a sphere that sits
comfortably within the city of New York, which is 35 miles wide (56 kilometers
wide).
Being reduced from a diameter of 870,000 miles (1.4 million kilometers) to just
12 miles (20 kilometers) would have a striking effect on the material within it, and this
is definitely the case for neutron stars. NASA estimates that a single sugar cube
comprised of this neutron-rich matter would weigh around 1 trillion kilograms (or 1
billion tons) if it were brought to Earth. That's a sugar cube that weighs as much as
3,000 Empire State Buildings or the entire human race.
c) Black hole
The Milky Way could contain over 100 million black holes, though detecting
these gluttonous beasts is very difficult. At the heart of the Milky Way lies a
supermassive black hole — Sagittarius A*. The colossal structure is about 4 million
times the mass of the sun and lies approximately 26,000 light-years away from Earth,
according to a statement from NASA.
The first image of a black hole was captured in 2019 by the Event Horizon
Telescope (EHT) collaboration. The striking photo of the black hole at the center of
the M87 galaxy 55 million light-years from Earth thrilled scientists around the world.
Black holes are expected to form via two distinct channels. According to the first
pathway, they are stellar corpses, so they form when massive stars die.
Stars whose birth masses are above roughly 8 to 10 times mass of our sun,
when they exhaust all their fuel — their hydrogen — they explode and die leaving
behind a very compact dense object, a black hole. The resulting black hole that is left
behind is referred to as a stellar mass black hole and its mass is of the order of a few
times the mass of the sun.
Not all stars leave behind black holes, stars with lower birth masses leave
behind a neutron star or a white dwarf. Another way that black hole’s form is from the
direct collapse of gas, a process that is expected to result in more massive black holes
with a mass ranging from 1000 times the mass of the sun up to even 100,000 times the
mass of the sun. This channel circumvents the formation of the traditional star, and is
believed to operate in the early universe and produce more massive black hole seeds.
Albert Einstein first predicted the existence of black holes in 1916, with
his general theory of relativity. The term "black hole" was coined many years later in
1967 by American astronomer John Wheeler. After decades of black holes being
known only as theoretical objects.
The first black hole ever discovered was Cygnus X-1, located within the Milky
Way in the constellation of Cygnus, the Swan. Astronomers saw the first signs of the
black hole in 1964 when a sounding rocket detected celestial sources of X-
rays according to NASA. The closest black hole to Earth is dubbed "The Unicorn" and
is situated approximately 1,500 light-years away.
d) Star clusters:
f) Binary Stars
A binary star is a system of two gravitationally bound stars that orbit a common
center of mass called a barycenter.
Stars in a binary system do not necessarily have the same mass, size or
brightness. The larger star of a binary couple is called the primary star, while the
smaller one is known as the secondary star or the companion star.
This diagram shows how the two stars in a binary system each have an
elliptical orbit (can be almost circular in some cases). They share a common focus
which is the centre of mass or bary center of the system and orbit around this point.
The radius vector joining the two stars always cuts through the barycentre.
Binary systems may have highly elliptical orbits as shown above. In these
cases, the eccentricity, e, is closer to 1. If e is close to 0 the orbits will be more
circular.
Types of binary stars:
Visual binaries.
Spectroscopic binaries.
Eclipsing binaries.
Astrometric binaries.