Stars
What is a Star?
The Pleiades, a cluster of young stars
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A star is a ball of gas held together by its own gravity. The force of
gravity is continually trying to cause the star to collapse. This is
counteracted by the pressure of hot gas and/or radiation in the star's
interior. This is called hydrostatic support. During most of the
lifetime of a star, the interior heat and radiation is provided by
nuclear reactions near the center; this is phase of the star's life is
called the main sequence.
Before and after the main sequence, the heat sources differ slightly:
before the main sequence the star is contracting, and is not yet hot nor
dense enough in the interior for the nuclear reactions to begin. During this
phase, hydrostatic support is provided by the heat generated during
contraction; after the main sequence, most of the nuclear fuel in the center
has been used up. The star now requires a series of less efficient nuclear
reactions for internal heat, before finally collapsing when these no longer
generate sufficient heat to support the star against its own
gravity.
The Main Sequence
The properties of a main sequence star can be understood
by considering the various physical processes acting in the interior.
First is the hydrostatic balance, also called hydrostatic
equilibrium. This determines the density structure of the
star as the internal pressure gradient balances against the
force of gravity. Another way of thinking about this is
to imagine the star as a large number of nested thin
spherical shells (sort of like an onion). The inward forces on each shell
consist of the gravitational pull from all the shells inside it, and
the gas and radiation pressure on the outside of the shell.
The only outward force on each shell is
the gas and radiation pressure on the inside of the shell;
there is no gravitational force from material outside the shell
(this is known as Gauss's theorem).
In hydrostatic equilibrium, the inward and outward forces must balance.
If they don't, the shell will either collapse or expand. The timescale
for this to occur is called the 'free-fall timescale', and
it is about 2000 seconds for a star like the Sun. Since we
know the Sun has been more or less stable over the age of the
Earth (several billion years), the hydrostatic balance must
be maintained to a very high accuracy. A consequence of hydrostatic
balance is that the pressure on each shell from material outside it must be
less than the pressure from material inside it. This is because gravity
acts only in the inward direction. Thus, the pressure in the star must
decrease with increasing radius. This is an intuitively obvious result; the
pressure at the center of the star is greater than it is at the
surface.
The second physical process to consider is the transport of energy
from the interior of the star to the edge. The interior of the star
(that is, near the center) is heated by nuclear reactions, while
at the surface of the star electromagnetic radiation can escape
essentially freely into space. This situation is analogous to a pot of water
on a stove, in which heat is deposited at the bottom by the stove
burner, and is transported upward through the water to the surface
where it can escape. The rate at which the
water on the stove can transport the heat determines the
temperature; a lid on the pot will cause the temperature in the water
to be higher than it would be with no lid, since heat is impeded from
escaping the pot. In the case of a star,
the temperature of the gas determines the density structure
via the hydrostatic equilibrium condition, so understanding the
transport is important. The transport can occur by either
of two mechanisms: either the energy is carried by radiation, or
it is carried by convection. Radiation is the mechanism
by which the Earth receives heat from the Sun, and its efficiency
depends on the opacity of the material that the radiation must
traverse. Opacity is a measure of the transparency of a gas,
and it depends on the gas temperature, density, and elemental
composition in a complicated way. Convection is analogous
to the turbulent motion in a pot
of water as it boils. It involves motion of the fluid in the
pot (or the interior of the star) which transports heat.
The operation of convection depends on how easily the gas can
move, i.e. its viscosity and any forces (such as gravity) which
tend to resist the convective motion. In addition, convection
can only operate if it transports more heat than radiation.
This turns out to be important! When the opacity is high
(and radiation is inefficient), convection takes
over. The details of the efficiency of convection are not well
understood, and they are probably the major source of uncertainty
in the study of stellar structure and evolution. A third energy
transport mechanism, conduction, is relatively unimportant in
stellar interiors.
Main sequence stars have zones
(in radius) which are convective, and zones which are radiative,
and the location of these zones depends on the behavior of the opacity,
in addition to the other properties of the star.
Massive stars (i.e., greater than several solar masses)
are convective deep in their cores, and are radiative
in their outer layers. Low mass stars (i.e., mass comparable to the Sun
and below) are convective in their outer layers and radiative in
their cores. Intermediate mass stars (spectral type A) may be radiative
throughout. Convection is likely to be important in determining other
properties of the star. The existence of a hot corona may be
associated with active convection in the outer layers, and the depth
of the convective layer determines the extent to which material from
the deep interior of the star is mixed into the outer layers. Since
interior material is likely to have undergone nuclear reactions, which
change the elemental abundances, this mixing affects the abundances
in the star's atmosphere. These can be observed by studying stellar
spectra. They may also be ejected from the star in a stellar wind, and
so affect the composition of interstellar gas.
The final ingredient in determining the structure of a main sequence
star is the source of heat in the interior, nuclear reactions.
There are many of these, and the details are complicated and there
is still some uncertainty about the exact rates for the reactions
(for example, the solar neutrino problem). The basic reactions
which operate on the main sequence
are fusion reactions which convert hydrogen nuclei (protons) into helium
nuclei. These reactions require very high temperatures (greater than 10
million degrees) and densities (greater than 10,000 gm per cubic
centimeter), and the rates are very sensitive
functions of temperature and density. This is the factor which
ultimately determines the lifetime of a main sequence star. More
massive stars have greater central temperatures and densities and so
exhaust their nuclear fuel more rapidly (in spite of the fact that
they have more of it) than do lower mass stars. It turns out that
the main sequence lifetime is a sensitive function of mass. For a star like
the Sun the main-sequence stage lasts about 10,000,000,000 years,
whereas a star 10 times as massive will be 1,000 to 10,000 times as bright but
will only last about 20,000,000 years. A star one tenth of the Sun's mass
may only be 1/1,000th to 1/10,000th of its brightness, but will last about
1,000,000,000,000 years.
It is interesting to consider what would happen to the star if the
nuclear reactions were to suddenly turn off. The timescale required
for the energy from a photon
released at the center of the star to make its way to
the surface is approximately 1,000,000 years for the Sun. Along the way,
the original gamma-ray photon interacts with the gas in the sun and
loses energy. Through multiple interactions like this, this energy
"random walks" its way out of the sun, ultimately being emitted at the
surface as many UV and optical photons. Thus, if the
nuclear reactions were to turn off today, the Sun's luminosity would
stay approximately constant for a long time by
human standards. We do have historical records which tell us that the
Sun's output has been approximately constant over the course of written human
history, so we feel fairly confident that the nuclear reactions are
still operating. However, there is the possibility that nuclear energy
generation in the center of the Sun is not perfectly constant in time.
The three physical processes discussed so far, hydrostatic equilibrium,
radiation transport, and nuclear energy generation, serve to determine
the structure of a star. As with most things, the devil is in the details,
and the areas of greatest uncertainty are the behavior of opacity and
convection. These are active areas of scientific research.
A convenient way to characterize a star from observations is by its
luminosity and its color (or temperature). It is customary to plot these two quantities
in an x-y plot, called a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (after its inventors).
It turns out that when this is done for main sequence stars with a
range of masses, the points tend to occupy a narrow band in the
diagram. The location of a main sequence star in the diagram depends
only on its mass (see Figure below).
The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
Stellar Evolution
The mass of the star determines what happens after the main sequence phase.
Stars similar in mass to the Sun burn hydrogen into helium in their centers
during the main-sequence phase, but eventually there is not enough hydrogen
left in the center to provide the necessary radiation pressure to balance
gravity. The center of the star thus contracts until it is hot enough for
helium to be converted into carbon. The hydrogen in a shell continues to burn
into helium, but the outer layers of the star have to expand in order to
conserve energy. This makes the star appear brighter and cooler, and it
becomes a red giant. During the red giant phase, a star often loses a lot of
its outer layers which are blown away by the radiation coming from below.
Eventually, in the more massive stars of the group, the carbon may burn to
even heavier elements, but eventually the energy generation will fizzle out
and the star will collapse to a white dwarf. Astronomers
think that white dwarfs ultimately cool to become
black dwarfs.
Stars having masses between 0.08 and 0.4 times that of the Sun can have main sequence lifetimes greater
than the age (so far) of the Universe. These are known as red dwarfs, and
are quite plentiful in the Universe.
There are very few stars with masses greater than five times the mass of
the Sun, but their evolution ends in a spectacular fashion. They finish
their main sequence lifetime in a way similar to the lower mass stars,
but become brighter and cooler on the outside and are called red supergiants.
Carbon burning can develop at the star's center and a complex set of
element-burning shells can develop towards the end of the star's life.
During this stage, many different chemical elements will be produced in
the star and the central temperature will approach temperatures
between 100,000,000 K and about 600,000,000 K.
During this stage, the structure can resemble an onion skin with
progressive layers (going inward) dominated by elements with greater and
greater atomic mass. This process ends when the core is composed
primarily of iron. For all the elements up to iron, the addition of
more nucleons to the nucleus produces energy and so yields a small
contribution to the balance inside the star
between gravity and radiation. To add more nucleons to the iron nucleus
requires an input of energy, and so, once the center of the star consists of iron,
no more energy can be extracted. The star's core then has no resistance to the
force of gravity, and once it starts to contract a very rapid collapse will
take place. The protons and electrons combine to give a core composed of
neutrons and a vast amount of gravitational energy is released. This energy is
sufficient to blow away all the outer parts of the star in a violent
explosion and the star becomes a supernova. The
light of this one star at its peak during the
explosion is
then about as bright as that from all the other 100,000,000,000 stars in the
host galaxy. During this explosive phase, all the elements with atomic
weights greater than iron are formed and, together with the rest of the
outer regions of the star, are blown out into interstellar space. The
central core of neutrons is left as a neutron star, which could be a
pulsar. This is remarkable since in the early Universe
there were no elements heavier than helium. The first stars were composed
almost entirely of hydrogen and helium and there was no oxygen, nitrogen, iron,
or any of the other elements that are necessary for life. These were all
produced inside massive stars and were all spread throughout space by
such supernovae events. We are made up of material that has been processed at
least once inside stars.
Last Modified: Sept 2004
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