spiral density waves initiate star formation. a molecular cloud passing through the sagittarius...

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Spiral Density waves initiate star formation

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Page 1: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Spiral Density waves initiate star formation

Page 2: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm

Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star winds

Initiation of star formation

Spiral arm

Page 3: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Supernova bubble

Bubble moving outward from supernova

Molecular cloud

Page 4: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Star formation in a compressed cloud

• A region of the molecular cloud becomes dense.• This pocket of over density is much bigger than

a single star.• This over dense region is not uniform, but has

within it other, smaller regions of high density.• As the over density begins to be drawn together

by gravity, it fragments into smaller pockets of gas which go on to form individual stars.

• The result is a star cluster. The more massive pockets from massive stars, the less massive form smaller stars, like the Sun

Page 5: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Spinning stars and disks

• As material falls into a newly forming star it begins to spin rapidly.

• This is due to another conservation law. It is the conservation of angular momentum.

• Angular momentum is similar to regular momentum in a straight line. Angular momentum is just the momentum that keeps things spinning.

Page 6: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Angular momentum is constant

• L = mass X velocity X radius• Where L is angular momentum and it is

constant in a system.

• L = mvr

• Let’s examine this by first holding the mass, m, constant.

Page 7: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

L = mvr So, what happens if the radius decreases?

1 2 3 4

0% 0%0%0%

1. The velocity will increase

2. The velocity will decrease

3. The velocity will stay the same

4. L will decrease

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Page 8: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

• If the radius were to decrease, then the velocity has to increase. Causing the object to speed up its rotation.

• L = mvr and L is constant. So if r gets smaller and m is constant, there is no choice but for v to increase in such a way as to keep mvr constant.

Page 9: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

• As a star begins to form and contracts (shrinking R), the spinning material falling in, speeds up (increasing v).

• This causes the proto-star to spin faster and faster as it shrinks

• The material outside the proto-star spins fast enough to orbit, and flattens into a spinning disk.

Page 10: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Pre-main sequence stars with a disk of in falling material and bi-polar out flows

Page 11: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star
Page 12: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

These are stars that are still forming. As gas falls into the forming star, some is

redirected out along the poles of the star.

Page 13: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

What is happening?

• Material in the spinning disk is falling into the newly forming star.

• Two things can happen…• 1) Some of the gas is caught in the magnetic

field of the star and shot out along the poles, where the magnetic field is the strongest.

• 2) The star has a stellar wind that is attempting to blow the gas away. The gas is restrained from moving in the disk, but perpendicular to the disk it can flow outward quite easily.

Page 14: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Now we will look in detail at the star forming process.

Page 15: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

• A) A large over dense region fragments into smaller pockets of high density

• B) A individual pocket begins to shrink due to the influence of gravity.

• Any small amount of spinning in the extended cloud will cause fast spinning as the cloud shrinks, due to the conservation of angular momentum. L = mrv

Page 16: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

But why does the cloud shrink at all?

• In terms of energy, the material that is going to form the star loses potential energy which is changed into kinetic energy.

• This speeds up the material. So when the material approaches the center of the cloud it should be moving very fast.

• This would suggest that in falling material will simply fly back out, turning its kinetic energy into potential energy once again.

• If this happened the star would never form.

Page 17: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Mass on a spring

• The mass on a spring starts with lots of potential energy.

• The potential energy is changed into kinetic energy making the mass move very fast.

• Then the kinetic energy is changed back into potential energy

• The spring oscillates.

Page 18: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Why does the proto-star shrink?

1 2 3

33% 33%33%1. Atoms slow down due to

head on collisions near the center

2. Atoms collide and radiate giving up their kinetic energy

3. Atoms can kinetic energy but the pull of gravity slows them down at the center.

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Page 19: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Proto-star begins to shrink, but in the process it is radiating. Gravitational

potential energy is being converted into luminosity.

Page 20: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Let’s remember what luminosity depends on.

• L = σT4(4πR2)

• There is a battle going on, between the effects of a shrinking radius and increasing temperature.

• Let’s look at the H-R diagram to see once again how these two parameters change.

Page 21: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star
Page 22: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Temperature is increasing this way

Page 23: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Temperature is increasing this way

Radius is increasing in this direction

Page 24: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

So in the first phase (1), the luminosity is increasing because the temperature is going up. The radius is actually shrinking, but is losing the

battle to the increase in temperature.The star move up in luminosity and increases in

temperature

Page 25: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Right here, just before #2, something strange happens. We see at #2 the luminosity is dropping.

What is causing this drop in luminosity?

Page 26: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

What is causing the down turn at #2

1 2 3

33% 33%33%1. Temperature is

decreasing while the radius is increasing

2. Radius is constant but temperature is increasing

3. Radius is rapidly decreasing while temperature is constant

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Page 27: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

At this point, convection begins in the proto-star.Convection is a very efficient way to transport

energy. The atoms give up their kinetic energy and cool, causing the star to rapidly shrink.

The luminosity is dominated by the shrinking radius. Radius wins this battle.

Page 28: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

At this point, (3) the core temperature is hot enough for nuclear reactions to begin. As the

reactions increase, the star begins to heat up, and expand.

Temperature is winning this battle.

Page 29: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Finally at (4) the reaction rates come into equilibrium with the inward force of gravity. The

star becomes stable, and is now on the main sequence.

Page 30: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Here are the evolutionary tracks for various mass stars. Stars that never have convection do not

have the down turn. Also the very massive stars form fast, due to their large gravity.

Page 31: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Interesting, but does it really happen. Here is the cluster at the center of the Orion Nebula

Page 32: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

This is the HR diagram for the Orion cluster

Main sequence line

Massive stars on MS, but lower mass stars not.

Page 33: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Close up of low mass stars

Page 34: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Same thing in Lagoon Nebula.

Page 35: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Pleiades, what about them?

Page 36: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Still some gas around

Page 37: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

And dust shows up in the infrared image taken by Spitzer telescope

Page 38: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

All stars are on the main-sequence except the O-stars which are already running out of

fuel and moving off the main-sequence.

Page 39: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star
Page 40: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star
Page 41: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

It would take 100,000 sun-like stars to produce the luminosity of 1, O-type star

Page 42: Spiral Density waves initiate star formation. A molecular cloud passing through the Sagittarius spiral arm Gas outflows from super supernova or O/B star

Quiz #6

• Most stars form in the spiral arms of galaxies• Stars form in clusters, with all types of stars

forming. O,B,A,F,G,K,M• Spiral arms barely move, but gas clouds and

stars orbit around the galaxy moving in and out of spiral arms

• From the HR diagram, by far the most luminous stars are the O-type stars. Their luminosity can be 100,000 times the Sun’s.

• Why is the spiral structure in galaxies so noticeable, even at great distances?