5.3-4 Flashcards
1
Q
Evolution of Stars
which two diagrams can be used?
A
Two ways to describe the evolution:
- HR-diagram changes
- Changes in central parameters (log ρ - log T-diagram)
2
Q
Equation of States of gas (4)
A
- A: Ideal Gas (common in normal stars), P = K0 ρ T
- B: Degenerate Gas (high ρ, low T), P = K1 ρ5/3
- C: Relativistic Degenerate Gas, P = K2 ρ4/3
- D: Radiation Pressure Dominated Gas, P = a T4 / 3
3
Q
Sun in log ρ-log T-diagram
A
- In the ideal gas region
- ρ and T decrease from center to surface (convection)
4
Q
Nuclear Burning Zones
properties of gas
A
- Mainly in ideal gas region, extending into degenerate gas region
- Higher ρ and T for more advanced burning states
5
Q
Evolution of Stars in log ρ-log T-diagram
A
- Towards higher ρ and T (Virial theorem)
- Pause on contraction at burning zones
- Evolution mass dependent
6
Q
Gas Planets and Brown Dwarfs
A
Degenerate before reaching H-burning
7
Q
Low Mass Stars
(less than solar mass)
A
- Reach H-burning
- Takes longer than Hubble time to evolve further
8
Q
Burning / Evolution of Solar Mass Stars
A
- H-burning
- He-burning
- Then evolve into degenerate white dwarf
9
Q
High Mass Stars
A
- All burning stages
- Explosion during Si-burning (Fe-core > 1.4 M⊙)
10
Q
Neutron Stars and Pulsars (5)
also state densities
A
- Free neutrons decay spontaneously (n → p + e- + 𝛎bar, half-life 13 min)
- Inverse neutron decay requires energy (ΔE=1.3 MeV), occurs at critical density ρc ≈ 1010 kg/m3
- Collapse of degenerate iron core leads to neutron star formation
- Density for collapse: ρc ≈ 1014 kg/m3 for Fe-nuclei
- Neutron stars form a degenerate gas
11
Q
Pulsars
A
- Emit radio pulses with stable periodicity (~1 s)
- First pulsar (Crab) found in nebulosity
- Associated with past supernovae (potentially)
- Pointed emission from magnetic poles causes light-house effect
12
Q
Rotation Picture for Pulsars
which conditions have to be met and what is the density?
A
- Gravitational force > centrifugal force
- Ω < (G ρ)1/2
- For P = 1 s, ρ > 6 · 1011 kg/m3
- Higher density than white dwarfs (600x)
13
Q
Energy of Pulsars
and their lifetime
A
- Rotation energy Erot = 1/5 m r2 Ω2
- Yields Erot = 2 · 1039 J for typical pulsar parameters
- Pulsars slow down due to radiation and nebula powering
- Typical life-time 107 yr
14
Q
Millisecond Pulsars (5)
A
- Old
- Low magnetic field
- Fast rotation (P ≈ 10 ms)
- Often in binary systems, spun-up by mass transfer
- Extremely accurate clocks (Pdot ≈ 10-17)
15
Q
Binary Pulsar and Gravitational Waves
A
- Rotational period 0.059 s
- Orbital period 8 hours
- Measured orbital period change matches prediction for gravitational wave emission