Stars & their evolution Flashcards
How many miles is the Sun from Earth?
150 million miles or 1 Astronomical Unit.
What is a nebula?
Clouds of dust known as Nebula or ‘cloud-forming regions’.
How can we view ‘baby’ stars?
As the baby star is surrounded by gas and dust, and relatively cool (red) we use infrared light.
Why is everything a disc?
Gravity pull things in but the centrifugal force counteracts gravity along the rotation axis causing the disc to form.
What causes a star to generate heat?
Heat originates from nuclear fusion. An accelerated charged particle (such as an electron) radiates energy as thermal radiation (light).
What is Stefan’s Law?
Apparent luminosity is related to distance, temperature and area. (NB: the further away a object the smaller it looks).
What is Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram?
This diagram shows us the evolution of a star i.e. stellar evolution - baby stars are born and appear in the lower-right of the H-R Diagram “Main Sequence”.
The chart depicts the luminosity & colour of stars form a distinct pattern.
What does colour represented on the H-R diagram?
Colour represents temperature.
What does luminosity tell you on the H-R diagram?
Luminosity is telling you how big the star it is (width).
How is mass represented on the H-R diagram?
Mass determines the location of a star on the main sequence e.g. low mass stars are cool, red and dim.
What is hydrostatic equilibrium?
Hydrogen and helium pushes against gravity to keep the star’s shape.
What is the most abundant element in the universe?
Hydrogen.
What is nuclear fusion?
The combination of two atoms to form another e.g. two hydrogen atoms to form helium. This is how stars are powered.
What is nuclear fission?
Take one large atom and pull it apart (e.g. uranium into plutonium) which results in left over neutrons that can cause Chernobyl-esque disasters.
Has nuclear fusion been created on Earth?
Yes. We have been able to recreate this on Earth (for about 1min) within the Joint European Torus (JET) nuclear fusion experiment in Oxford. However Hydrogen Fusion requires a lot of energy to force the two atoms together.
How is a star created?
- Gas Cloud
- The cloud collapses (usually by the shockwave of a nearby star collapsing)
- Clumpy bits form as gravity pulls it together
- Star is formed surrounded by dust and gas (the leftover gas and dust creates planets and forms a solar system)
- The star eventually gets hot enough to create nuclear fusion.
What are the main layers of a star?
- Core
- Radioactive Zone (where light tries to escape - radiation is energy transfer by light)
- Convective Zone (where gas is moving in similar way to observing convection (energy movement) in a lava lamp!)
What is conduction?
Energy passed between particles.
How old is the Sun?
Approximately 5,000 million years old.
What is stellar evolution?
The fate of all stars is pre-determined by its mass - locked in place when star forms.
Each star is unique - low and high mass stars evolve differently but can be charted on the H-R diagram e.g.
- Small Star –> Red Giant –> Planetary Nebula –> White Dwarf
- Large Star –> Red Supergiant –> Supernova –> Neutron Star or Black Hole