Lecture 12 Flashcards

1
Q

What are star forming clouds?

A

Stars form in dark clouds of dusty gas in interstellar space

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2
Q

What is the gas between the stars

A

Interstellar medium

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3
Q

How can you determine the composition of clouds

A

From its absorption lines in the spectra of stars

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4
Q

Composition of clouds

A

70% H, 28% He and 2% heavier elements in our region of milky way

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5
Q

What are molecular clouds

A

Most of the matter in star forming clouds is in the form of molecules (H2, CO, etc.)
These molecular clouds have a tempertaure of 10-30K and a desity of about 300 molecules per cubic centimeter

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6
Q

Gravity versus pressure

A

Gravity can create stars only if it can overcome the force of thermal pressure in a cloud
Emmision lines from molecules in a cloud can prevent a pressure buildup by concerting thermal energy into infrared and radio photons that escape the clpud

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7
Q

Mass of a star forming cloud

A

A typical molecular cloud (T- 30K, n- 300 particles/cm3) must contain at least a few hundred solar masses for gravity to overcome pressure

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8
Q

The first stars

A

Elelments like carbon and oxygen had not yet been made when the first stars formed
Without CO molecules to provide cooling, the clouds that formed the first stars had to be considerably warmer than todays molecular clouds

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9
Q

First Stars Versus Stars today?

A

First stars must be more massive than most of todays stars for gravity to overcome poressure

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10
Q

How do stars stay cool

A

Because of emmision by carbon monoxide

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11
Q

Contraction in stars

A

As contraction packs the molecules and dust particles of a cloud fragment closer together, it becomes harder for infared and radio photons to escape

Thermal energy then begins to build up inside, increasing the internal pressure

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12
Q

What is a protostar

A

Contraction slows down, and the center of the cloud fragment becomes a protostar

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13
Q

From protostar to main sequence

A

A protostar looks starlike after the surrounding gas is blown away, but its thermal energy comes from gravitational contraction, not fusion
Contraction must continue until the core becomes hot enough for nuclear fusion
Contraction stops when the energy released by core fusion balances energy radiated from the surface - the star is now a main sequence star

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14
Q

Birth Stages on a Life track

A

Assembly of a protostar
Convective Contraction
Radiative Contraction
Self Sustaining fusion

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15
Q

Assembly of a protostar

A

Luminosity and temperature grow as matter collects into a protostar

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16
Q

Convective Contraction

A

Surface temperature remains near 3000K while convection id main energy transport mechanism

17
Q

Radiative Contraction

A

Luminosity remains nearly during late stages of conraction, while radiation transports energy through star

18
Q

Self sustaining fusion

A

Core temperatures continue to rise until star begns fusion and arrives on the main sequence

19
Q

What does the mass of a main sequence star determine

A

Its core pressure and temperature

20
Q

Stars of higher mass have higher core temperature and more rapid fusion, making those stars both…..

A

Luminous and shorter lived

21
Q
A