nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

60
Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Upload: chase

Post on 14-Jan-2016

63 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles. Outline: What nucleosynthesis is, and where it occurs Molecular clouds YSO & protoplanetary disk phase Main Sequence phase Old age & death of low mass stars Old age & death of high mass stars Nucleosynthesis & pre-solar grains. Stellar lifecycles. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Page 2: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Outline:

2. What nucleosynthesis is, and where it occurs

3. Molecular clouds

4. YSO & protoplanetary disk phase

5. Main Sequence phase

6. Old age & death of low mass stars

7. Old age & death of high mass stars

8. Nucleosynthesis & pre-solar grains

Ste

llar

lifec

ycle

s

Page 3: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

What nucleosynthesis is,and where it occurs

Page 4: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Nucleosynthesis

formation of elements

Except for H, He(created in Big Bang),all other elements createdby fusion processes instars

Re

lati

ve

ab

un

da

nce

Page 5: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

StellarNucleosynthesis

Some H destroyed;all elements withZ > 2 produced

Various processes,depend on

(1) star mass (determines T)

(2) age (determinesstarting composition)

Z = no. protons, determines element

Page 6: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Beta Stability Valley.

Nucleons with rightmix of neutrons (n) toprotons (p) are stable.

Those that lie outsideof this mix are radioactive.

n >

p >

Page 7: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Beta Stability Valley.

Too many n:beta particle (electron)emitted, n convertedto p. (Beta Decay)

e.g. 26Al -> 26Mg + betae.g. 53Mn -> 53Cr + beta

Some stellarnucleosynthesisresulted inn-rich nucleonsthat are short-livednuclides.

n >

p > too

many n

Page 8: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Beta Stability Valley.

Too many p:electron captured bynucleus, p convertedto n.

e.g.,41Ca + electron -> 41K

Other stellarnucleosynthesisproduced short-livedp-rich nucleons.

n >

p >

toomany p

Page 9: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Stellar lifecycles: from birth to death

low massstar (< 5 Msun)

high massstar (> 5 Msun)

Page 10: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Stellar lifecycles: low mass stars

1 & 5.molecularcloud

low massstar (< 5 Msun)

3. Red Giant2. Main Seq.

4. Planetary nebula

4. White dwarf

Stellar nucleosynthesis

Nucleosynthesis possibleif white dwarf in binary system(during nova or supernova)

Page 11: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Stellar lifecycles: high mass stars

1 & 6.molecularcloud

high massstar (>5 Msun)

3. Red Giant/ Supergiant

2. Main Seq.(luminous)

4. Supernova

5. Black hole

5. Neutron star

Stellar nucleosynthesis

Page 12: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Track stellar evolution on H-R diagram of T vs luminosity

Luminosity: energy / time

Page 13: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Distribution ofstars onH-R diagram.

When corrected forintrinsic brightness,there are MANY morecool Main Sequencestars than hot.

Page 14: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

On main sequence, luminosity depends on mass

L ~ M3.5

Page 15: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Molecular clouds:

Where it begins & ends

molecularcloud

Page 16: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Molecular cloudscold, dense areas ininterstellar medium (ISM)

Horsehead Nebula

Mainly molecular H2,also dust, T ~ 10s of K

Page 17: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Famous EagleNebula image.

Cool dark cloudsare close to hotstars that arecausing them toevaporate.

Page 18: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Dust in ISM consists of:

-- ices, organic molecules, silicates, metal, graphite, etc.-- some of these preserved as pre-solar grains & organic components in meteorites

Page 19: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

A largerInterplanetary DustParticle (IDP)

Page 20: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

2 atoms

3 atoms

4 atoms

5 atoms

6 atoms

7 atoms

H2 C3* c-C3H C5* C5H C6H

AlF C2H l-C3H C4H l-H2C4 CH2CHCN

AlCl C2O C3N C4Si C2H4* CH3C2H

C2** C2S C3O l-C3H2 CH3CN HC5N

CH CH2 C3S c-C3H2 CH3NC CH3CHO

CH+ HCN C2H2* CH2CN CH3OH CH3NH2

CN HCO NH3 CH4* CH3SH c-C2H4O

CO HCO+ HCCN HC3N HC3NH+ H2CCHOHCO+ HCS+ HCNH+ HC2NC HC2CHO

CP HOC+ HNCO HCOOH NH2CHO

SiC H2O HNCS H2CNH C5N

HCl H2S HOCO+ H2C2O l-HC4H* (?)

KCl HNC H2CO H2NCN l-HC4NNH HNO H2CN HNC3

NO MgCN H2CS SiH4*

NS MgNC H3O+ H2COH+

NaCl N2H+ c-SiC3

OH N2O CH3*

2 atoms

3 atoms

4 atoms

5 atoms

6 atoms

7 atoms

PN NaCN

SO OCS

SO+ SO2

SiN c-SiC2

SiO CO2*

SiS NH2

CS H3+*

SH* SiCN

HD AlNC

FeO? SiNC

O2 ?

8 atoms

9 atoms

10 atoms 11 atoms12 atoms

13 atoms

CH3C3N CH3C4H CH3C5N (?) HC9N C6H6* (?) HC11N

HCOOCH3 CH3CH2CN (CH3)2CO

CH3COOH (CH3)2O (CH2OH)2 (?)

C7H CH3CH2OHH2NCH2COOHGlycine ?

H2C6 HC7N CH3CH2CHO

CH2OHCHO C8H

l-HC6H* (?)

CH2CHCHO (?)

All molecules have been detected (also) by rotational spectroscopy in the radiofrequency to far-infrared regions unless indicated otherwise. * indicates molecules that have been detected by their rotation-vibration spectrum,** those detected by electronic spectroscopy only.

http://www.ph1.uni-koeln.de/vorhersagen/molecules/main_molecules.html

Molecules inISM as of12 / 2004

Note manyC-compounds

HF H2D+, HD2+

Page 21: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Photochemistry can occur in icy mantles to createcomplex hydrocarbons from simple molecules

Page 22: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Gravity in molecularclouds helps promotecollapse of cloud

…and sometimes isassisted by a trigger

Page 23: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Young stellar objects (YSOs)& protoplanetary disks (proplyds)

YSOs

Page 24: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

YSOs & Proplyds:Molecular cloud fragments that have collapsed– no fusion yet

< Protoplanetary disk around glowing YSO in Orion

Solar nebula:the Protoplanetary diskout of which our solar

system formed

Page 25: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Herbig-HaroObjects--

• YSOs withdisks & bipolaroutflows

Page 26: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Magnetic fields aroundYSOs can create polarjets and X winds

Page 27: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Collapse of molecular cloud fragments occurs rapidly

~105 to 107 yrs,depending on mass

Protostellar diskphase lasts ~106 yrs

Page 28: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Single collapsing molecular cloud produces manyfragments, each of which can produce a star

Page 29: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Main Sequence phase:Middle age

Main sequence

Page 30: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Star “turns on” when nuclear fusion occurs

main sequence star – either proton-proton chain or CNO cycle nucleosynthesis

P-P chain net: 4 H to 1 He

Page 31: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

CNO cycle – more efficient method, but requires higher internal temperature, so only for stars with mass higher than 1.1 solar masses

12C + p -> 13N 13N -> 13C

13C + p -> 14N

14N + p -> 15O 15O -> 15N

15N + p -> 12C + 4He

CNO cycle net reaction : 4 H to 1 He

Page 32: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Star stays on main sequence in stable condition– so long as H remains in the core

A more massive star must produce more energy to support its own weight – reason there is a correlation of mass and luminosity on main sequence

Page 33: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

But– eventually the H runs out

Lifetime on main sequence = fuel / rate of consumption~ M / L ~ M / M3.5

lifetime ~ 1/M2.5

So a 4 solar mass star will have a main sequence lifetime 1/32 as long as our sun

Page 34: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

So, what happens when the core runs out of hydrogen?

• Star begins to collapse, heats up

• Core contains He, continues to collapse

• But H fuses to He in shell– greatly inflating star

RED GIANT (low mass)or SUPERGIANT (high mass)

Page 35: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

What happens next depends on stellar mass

Page 36: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Old age and death of low mass stars

Planetary nebula

White dwarf

Red Giant

Page 37: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

There are different types of Red Giant Stars

1) RGB (Red Giant Branch)2) Horizontal branch3) AGB (Asymptotic Giant Branch)

These differ in position on H-R diagram and ininterior structure

Page 38: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Red Giant (RGB) star: H burning in shell

Page 39: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Red Giant (Horizontal branch) star: He fusion in coreRed Giant (AGB) star: He burning in shell

AGB star

Page 40: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Convective dredge-ups bring productsof fusion to surface

Red Giant includes: s-process nucleosynthesis

Page 41: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

s-processnucleosynthesis:

slow neutronaddition

beta decaykeeps pacewith n addition

No.

pro

tons

(Z

)

Page 42: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

An AGB can lose its outer layers—Ultimately a planetary nebula forms,leaving a white dwarf in the center

Planetary nebula

White dwarf

Page 43: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Note: planetary nebula have nothing to do with planets!

Planetary nebulas

Page 44: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Nuclear fusionstops whenthe star becomesa white dwarf—

It gradually cools down

Page 45: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Old age & death of high mass stars

SupernovaBlack hole

Super Giant

Neutron star

Page 46: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

High-mass stars: Progressive core fusionof elements heavier than C

Page 47: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Includes: s-process nucleosynthesis as Supergiant,r-process nucleosynthesis during core collapse

Page 48: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

r-processnucleosynthesis:

rapid neutron addition

beta decay does notkeep pace withn addition

No.

pro

tons

(Z

)

Page 49: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

End for high mass star comes as it tries to fuse core Fe into heavier elements– andfinds this absorbs energy

STAR COLLAPSES & EXPLODES AS SUPERNOVA

Page 50: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

--Fe core turns into dense neutrons--Supernova forms because overlying star falls onto dense core & bounces off of it

Page 51: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Supernova remnants

Page 52: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Crab Nebulasupernovaremnant.

A spinningneutron star(pulsar) occursin the centralregion.

Page 53: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

There are different types of Supernovae

1) Type 2 (kept upper H-rich portion)2) Type 1b (lost H, but kept He-rich portions)3) Type 1c (lost both H & He portions)4) Type 1a (explosion on white dwarf in binary system)

Page 54: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Type 2 supernovae had intact upper layers

Page 55: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Type 1b & c supernovae had lost upper layers

Page 56: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Type 1a supernovae occur in binary systemswhen material from companion falls onto whitedwarf

Page 57: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

Nucleosynthesis &pre-solar grains

Page 58: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

process main commentproducts

H-burning 4He main seq.

He-burning 12C, 16O Red Giant

C-O-Ne-Si 20Ne, 28Si, 32Si, Supergiantsburning up to 56Fe

s-process many elements Red Giants, Supergiants

r-process many heavy supernovaelements

Summary of nucleosynthesis processes

Page 59: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles

material suggested astrophysical site

Ne-E exploding novaS-Xe Red Giant or SupergiantXe-HL supernovaeMacromolecular C low-T ISM

SiC C-rich AGB stars, supernovaeCorundum Red Giant & AGB starsNanodiamond supernovaeGraphite, Si3N4 supernovae

Pre-solar material in meteorites

Solar system formed out of diverse materials.

Page 60: Nucleosynthesis and stellar lifecycles