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Lecture 11 Lecture 11 Energy transport

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Lecture 11. Energy transport. Review: Nuclear energy. If each reaction releases an energy L, the amount of energy released per unit mass is just. The sum over all reactions gives the nuclear reaction contribution to e in our fifth fundamental equation:. Proton-proton chain (PPI). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lecture 11

Lecture 11Lecture 11

Energy transport

Page 2: Lecture 11

Review: Nuclear energyReview: Nuclear energy

• If each reaction releases an energy the amount of energy released per unit mass is just

TXXr xiixix 0

24 rdr

dLr

• The sum over all reactions gives the nuclear reaction contribution to in our fifth fundamental equation:

Page 3: Lecture 11

Proton-proton chain (PPI)Proton-proton chain (PPI)

HHeHeHe

HeHH

eHHH e

11

42

32

32

32

11

21

21

11

11

2

The net reaction is: 2224 42

11

eeHeH

But each of the above reactions occurs at its own rate. The first step is the slowest because it requires a proton to change into a neutron:

eenp Energy

This occurs via the weak force. The rate of this reaction determines the rate of Helium production

Page 4: Lecture 11

Proton-proton chain (PPII and PPIII)Proton-proton chain (PPII and PPIII)

HeHLi

LieBe

BeHeHe

e

42

11

73

73

74

74

42

32

2

Alternatively, helium-3 can react with helium-4 directly:

HeBe

eBeB

BHBe

e

42

84

84

85

85

11

74

2

Yet another route is via the collision between a proton and the beryllium-7 nucleus

This reaction only occurs 0.3% of the time in the Sun.

In the Sun, this reaction occurs 31% of the time; PPI occurs 69% of the time.

Page 5: Lecture 11

The PP chainThe PP chain

The nuclear energy generation rate for the PP chain, including all three branches:

kgWeTX Tpp /1038.2

3/1680.333/2

62

54

KTT 66 10/

Near T~1.5x107 K (i.e. the central temperature of the Sun):

W/kg1007.1 46

25

7 TXpp

355 /10 mkg

Page 6: Lecture 11

ExampleExample

W/kg1007.1 46

25

7 TXpp

If we imagine a core containing 10% of the Sun’s mass, composed entirely of hydrogen (X=1), calculate the total energy produced by the PP reaction.

Page 7: Lecture 11

The CNO cycleThe CNO cycle

There is a second, independent cycle in which carbon, nitrogen and oxygen act as catalysts. The main branch (accounting for 99.6% of CNO reactions) is:

HeCHN

eNO

OHN

NHC

eCN

NHC

e

e

42

126

11

157

157

158

158

11

147

147

11

136

136

137

137

11

126

kgWeTXX TCNOCNO /1067.8

3/1628.1523/2

6525

W/kg1024.8 9.1965

27 TXXCNOCNO at T~1.5x107 K

Page 8: Lecture 11

Helium collisionsHelium collisions

Recall that the temperature at which quantum tunneling becomes possible is:

2

422

21

20 3

4

4

1

kh

eZZT

• As hydrogen is converted into helium, the mean molecular weight increases.

• To keep the star in approximate pressure equilibrium, the density and temperature of the core must rise

Hm

kTP

As H burning progresses, the temperature increases and eventually He burning becomes possible

K 109.1 22

21

7 ZZmH

Page 9: Lecture 11

The triple-alpha processThe triple-alpha process

The burning of helium occurs via the triple alpha process:

CHeBe

BeHeHe126

42

84

84

42

42

The intermediate product 8-beryllium is very unstable, and will decay if not immediately struck by another Helium. Thus, this is almost a 3-body interaction

kgWeTY T /1009.51

8027.4438

325

113

W/kg1085.3 0.418

325

83 TY

Note the very strong temperature dependence. A 10% increase in T increases the energy generation by a factor 50.

Page 10: Lecture 11

NucleosynthesisNucleosynthesis

At the temperatures conducive to helium burning, other reactions can take place by the capturing of -particles (He atoms).

NeHeO

OHeC2010

42

168

168

42

126

Page 11: Lecture 11

NucleosynthesisNucleosynthesis

The binding energy per nucleon describes the stability of a nucleus. It is easier to break up a nucleus with a low binding energy.

Page 12: Lecture 11

BreakBreak

Page 13: Lecture 11

SummarySummary

We have now established four important equations:

2r

GM

dr

dP r

24 rdr

dM r

Hm

kTP

Hydrostatic equilibrium:

Mass conservation:

Equation of state:

There are 5 variables (P,,Mr, T and Lr) and 4 equations. To solve the stellar structure we will need to know something about the energy transportation.

24 rdr

dLr Energy production

Page 14: Lecture 11

Energy transportEnergy transport

Radiation: the photons carry the energy as they move through the star, and are absorbed at a rate that depends on the opacity.

Convection: buoyant, hot mass will rise

Conduction: collisions between particles transfer kinetic energy of particles. This is usually not important because gas densities are too low.

Page 15: Lecture 11

Radiation transportRadiation transport

When we considered the properties of radiation, we found an equation relating the pressure gradient to the radiative flux:

radrad F

cdr

dP

From this we can derive an expression for the temperature gradient, assuming a blackbody.

In regions of high opacity, or high radiative flux, the temperature gradient must be steep to transport the energy outward.

3264

3

Tr

L

dr

dT r