White Dwarfs
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SHELL BURNING STARS: Red Giants and Red Supergiants
SHELL BURNING STARS: Red Giants and Red Supergiants There is a large variety of stellar models which have a distinct core – envelope structure. While any main sequence star, or any white dwarf, may be well approximated with a single polytropic model, the stars with the core – envelope structure may be approximated with a composite polytrope: one for the core, another for the envelope, with a very large difference in the “K” constants between the two. This is a consequence of a very large difference in the specific entropies between the core and the envelope. The original reason for the difference is due to a jump in chemical composition. For example, the core may have no hydrogen, and mostly helium, while the envelope may be hydrogen rich. As a result, there is a nuclear burning shell at the bottom of the envelope; hydrogen burning shell in our example. The heat generated in the shell is diffusing out with radiation, and keeps the entropy very high throughout the envelope. The core – envelope structure is most pronounced when the core is degenerate, and its specific entropy near zero. It is supported against its own gravity with the non-thermal pressure of degenerate electron gas, while all stellar luminosity, and all entropy for the envelope, are provided by the shell source. A common property of stars with well developed core – envelope structure is not only a very large jump in specific entropy but also a very large difference in pressure between the center, Pc, the shell, Psh, and the photosphere, Pph. Of course, the two characteristics are closely related to each other. -
The Sun, Yellow Dwarf Star at the Heart of the Solar System NASA.Gov, Adapted by Newsela Staff
Name: ______________________________ Period: ______ Date: _____________ Article of the Week Directions: Read the following article carefully and annotate. You need to include at least 1 annotation per paragraph. Be sure to include all of the following in your total annotations. Annotation = Marking the Text + A Note of Explanation 1. Great Idea or Point – Write why you think it is a good idea or point – ! 2. Confusing Point or Idea – Write a question to ask that might help you understand – ? 3. Unknown Word or Phrase – Circle the unknown word or phrase, then write what you think it might mean based on context clues or your word knowledge – 4. A Question You Have – Write a question you have about something in the text – ?? 5. Summary – In a few sentences, write a summary of the paragraph, section, or passage – # The sun, yellow dwarf star at the heart of the solar system NASA.gov, adapted by Newsela staff Picture and Caption ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ Paragraph #1 ___________________________ ___________________________ This image shows an enormous eruption of solar material, called a coronal mass ejection, spreading out into space, captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics ___________________________ Observatory on January 8, 2002. Paragraph #2 Para #1 The sun is a hot ball made of glowing gases and is a type ___________________________ of star known as a yellow dwarf. It is at the heart of our solar system. ___________________________ Para #2 The solar system consists of everything that orbits the ___________________________ sun. The sun's gravity holds the solar system together, by keeping everything from planets to bits of dust in its orbit. -
Brown Dwarf: White Dwarf: Hertzsprung -Russell Diagram (H-R
Types of Stars Spectral Classifications: Based on the luminosity and effective temperature , the stars are categorized depending upon their positions in the HR diagram. Hertzsprung -Russell Diagram (H-R Diagram) : 1. The H-R Diagram is a graphical tool that astronomers use to classify stars according to their luminosity (i.e. brightness), spectral type, color, temperature and evolutionary stage. 2. HR diagram is a plot of luminosity of stars versus its effective temperature. 3. Most of the stars occupy the region in the diagram along the line called the main sequence. During that stage stars are fusing hydrogen in their cores. Various Types of Stars Brown Dwarf: White Dwarf: Brown dwarfs are sub-stellar objects After a star like the sun exhausts its nuclear that are not massive enough to sustain fuel, it loses its outer layer as a "planetary nuclear fusion processes. nebula" and leaves behind the remnant "white Since, comparatively they are very cold dwarf" core. objects, it is difficult to detect them. Stars with initial masses Now there are ongoing efforts to study M < 8Msun will end as white dwarfs. them in infrared wavelengths. A typical white dwarf is about the size of the This picture shows a brown dwarf around Earth. a star HD3651 located 36Ly away in It is very dense and hot. A spoonful of white constellation of Pisces. dwarf material on Earth would weigh as much as First directly detected Brown Dwarf HD 3651B. few tons. Image by: ESO The image is of Helix nebula towards constellation of Aquarius hosts a White Dwarf Helix Nebula 6500Ly away. -
Supernovae Sparked by Dark Matter in White Dwarfs
Supernovae Sparked By Dark Matter in White Dwarfs Javier F. Acevedog and Joseph Bramanteg;y gThe Arthur B. McDonald Canadian Astroparticle Physics Research Institute, Department of Physics, Engineering Physics, and Astronomy, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 2S8, Canada yPerimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 2Y5, Canada November 27, 2019 Abstract It was recently demonstrated that asymmetric dark matter can ignite supernovae by collecting and collapsing inside lone sub-Chandrasekhar mass white dwarfs, and that this may be the cause of Type Ia supernovae. A ball of asymmetric dark matter accumulated inside a white dwarf and collapsing under its own weight, sheds enough gravitational potential energy through scattering with nuclei, to spark the fusion reactions that precede a Type Ia supernova explosion. In this article we elaborate on this mechanism and use it to place new bounds on interactions between nucleons 6 16 and asymmetric dark matter for masses mX = 10 − 10 GeV. Interestingly, we find that for dark matter more massive than 1011 GeV, Type Ia supernova ignition can proceed through the Hawking evaporation of a small black hole formed by the collapsed dark matter. We also identify how a cold white dwarf's Coulomb crystal structure substantially suppresses dark matter-nuclear scattering at low momentum transfers, which is crucial for calculating the time it takes dark matter to form a black hole. Higgs and vector portal dark matter models that ignite Type Ia supernovae are explored. arXiv:1904.11993v3 [hep-ph] 26 Nov 2019 Contents 1 Introduction 2 2 Dark matter capture, thermalization and collapse in white dwarfs 4 2.1 Dark matter capture . -
The Impact of the Astro2010 Recommendations on Variable Star Science
The Impact of the Astro2010 Recommendations on Variable Star Science Corresponding Authors Lucianne M. Walkowicz Department of Astronomy, University of California Berkeley [email protected] phone: (510) 642–6931 Andrew C. Becker Department of Astronomy, University of Washington [email protected] phone: (206) 685–0542 Authors Scott F. Anderson, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington Joshua S. Bloom, Department of Astronomy, University of California Berkeley Leonid Georgiev, Universidad Autonoma de Mexico Josh Grindlay, Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Steve Howell, National Optical Astronomy Observatory Knox Long, Space Telescope Science Institute Anjum Mukadam, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington Andrej Prsa,ˇ Villanova University Joshua Pepper, Villanova University Arne Rau, California Institute of Technology Branimir Sesar, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington Nicole Silvestri, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington Nathan Smith, Department of Astronomy, University of California Berkeley Keivan Stassun, Vanderbilt University Paula Szkody, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington Science Frontier Panels: Stars and Stellar Evolution (SSE) February 16, 2009 Abstract The next decade of survey astronomy has the potential to transform our knowledge of variable stars. Stellar variability underpins our knowledge of the cosmological distance ladder, and provides direct tests of stellar formation and evolution theory. Variable stars can also be used to probe the fundamental physics of gravity and degenerate material in ways that are otherwise impossible in the laboratory. The computational and engineering advances of the past decade have made large–scale, time–domain surveys an immediate reality. Some surveys proposed for the next decade promise to gather more data than in the prior cumulative history of astronomy. -
Chapter 16 the Sun and Stars
Chapter 16 The Sun and Stars Stargazing is an awe-inspiring way to enjoy the night sky, but humans can learn only so much about stars from our position on Earth. The Hubble Space Telescope is a school-bus-size telescope that orbits Earth every 97 minutes at an altitude of 353 miles and a speed of about 17,500 miles per hour. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) transmits images and data from space to computers on Earth. In fact, HST sends enough data back to Earth each week to fill 3,600 feet of books on a shelf. Scientists store the data on special disks. In January 2006, HST captured images of the Orion Nebula, a huge area where stars are being formed. HST’s detailed images revealed over 3,000 stars that were never seen before. Information from the Hubble will help scientists understand more about how stars form. In this chapter, you will learn all about the star of our solar system, the sun, and about the characteristics of other stars. 1. Why do stars shine? 2. What kinds of stars are there? 3. How are stars formed, and do any other stars have planets? 16.1 The Sun and the Stars What are stars? Where did they come from? How long do they last? During most of the star - an enormous hot ball of gas day, we see only one star, the sun, which is 150 million kilometers away. On a clear held together by gravity which night, about 6,000 stars can be seen without a telescope. -
OLLI: the Birth, Life, and Death Of
The Birth, Life, and Death of Stars The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Florida State University Jorge Piekarewicz Department of Physics [email protected] Schedule: September 29 – November 3 Time: 11:30am – 1:30pm Location: Pepper Center, Broad Auditorium J. Piekarewicz (FSU-Physics) The Birth, Life, and Death of Stars Fall 2014 1 / 12 Ten Compelling Questions What is the raw material for making stars and where did it come from? What forces of nature contribute to energy generation in stars? How and where did the chemical elements form? ? How long do stars live? How will our Sun die? How do massive stars explode? ? What are the remnants of such stellar explosions? What prevents all stars from dying as black holes? What is the minimum mass of a black hole? ? What is role of FSU researchers in answering these questions? J. Piekarewicz (FSU-Physics) The Birth, Life, and Death of Stars Fall 2014 2 / 12 The Birth of Carbon: The Triple-Alpha Reaction The A=5 and A=8 Bottle-Neck 5 −22 p + α ! Li ! p + α (t1=2 ≈10 s) 8 −16 α + α ! Be ! α + α (t1=2 ≈10 s) BBN does not generate any heavy elements! He-ashes fuse in the hot( T ≈108 K) and dense( n≈1028 cm−3) core 8 −8 Physics demands a tiny concentration of Be (n8=n4 ≈10 ) Carbon is formed: α + α ! 8Be + α ! 12C + γ (7:367 MeV) Every atom in our body has been formed in stellar cores! J. Piekarewicz (FSU-Physics) The Birth, Life, and Death of Stars Fall 2014 3 / 12 Stellar Nucleosynthesis: From Carbon to Iron Stars are incredibly efficient thermonuclear furnaces Heavier He-ashes fuse to produce: C,N,O,F,Ne,Na,Mg,.. -
Neutron Stars: End State of High-Mass Stars
Chapter 13: The Stellar Graveyard 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2001/1227/index.html Chapter 13 Lecture 26 1 Low mass star High mass (>8 Msun) star Ends as a white dwarf. Ends in a supernova, leaving a neutron star or black hole 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110 Chapter 13 Lecture 26 2 White dwarfs: end state of low-mass stars • Inert remaining cores of dead low-mass stars. • No internal energy generation: start hot and steadily cool off. Optical image X-ray image Sirius A Sirius A high mass star high mass star Sirius B Sirius B white dwarf white dwarf 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110 Chapter 13 Lecture 26 3 White dwarfs are supported against gravitational collapse by electron degeneracy pressure 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110 Chapter 13 Lecture 26 4 A 1 MSun white dwarf is about the same size as the Earth… ⇒ A teaspoon of white dwarf material would weight 10 tons! 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110 Chapter 13 Lecture 26 5 More massive white dwarfs are smaller! Mass ⇒ gravitational compression ⇒ density ⇒ radius Chandrasekhar limit: white dwarfs cannot be more massive than 1.4 MSun 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110 Chapter 13 Lecture 26 6 White dwarfs in binary systems • WDʼs gravity can accrete gas from companion star. • Accreted gas can erupt in a short modest burst of nuclear fusion: novae • However, WDs cannot BANG! be more than 1.4 MSun. • If WD accretes too much gas, it is destroyed in a white dwarf supernova 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110 Chapter 13 Lecture 26 7 Nova: a nuclear explosion on the surface of a WD, gas is expelled and system returns to normal 3/31/2009 Habbal Astro110 Chapter 13 Lecture 26 8 One way to tell supernova types apart is with a light curve showing how the luminosity changes. -
Pulsating Red Giant Stars in Eccentric Binary Systems Discovered from Kepler Space-Based Photometry a Sample Study and the Analysis of KIC 5006817 P
A&A 564, A36 (2014) Astronomy DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201322477 & c ESO 2014 Astrophysics Pulsating red giant stars in eccentric binary systems discovered from Kepler space-based photometry A sample study and the analysis of KIC 5006817 P. G. Beck1,K.Hambleton2,1,J.Vos1, T. Kallinger3, S. Bloemen1, A. Tkachenko1, R. A. García4, R. H. Østensen1, C. Aerts1,5,D.W.Kurtz2, J. De Ridder1,S.Hekker6, K. Pavlovski7, S. Mathur8,K.DeSmedt1, A. Derekas9, E. Corsaro1, B. Mosser10,H.VanWinckel1,D.Huber11, P. Degroote1,G.R.Davies12,A.Prša13, J. Debosscher1, Y. Elsworth12,P.Nemeth1, L. Siess14,V.S.Schmid1,P.I.Pápics1,B.L.deVries1, A. J. van Marle1, P. Marcos-Arenal1, and A. Lobel15 1 Instituut voor Sterrenkunde, KU Leuven, 3001 Leuven, Belgium e-mail: [email protected] 2 Jeremiah Horrocks Institute, University of Central Lancashire, Preston PR1 2HE, UK 3 Institut für Astronomie der Universität Wien, Türkenschanzstr. 17, 1180 Wien, Austria 4 Laboratoire AIM, CEA/DSM-CNRS – Université Denis Diderot-IRFU/SAp, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France 5 Department of Astrophysics, IMAPP, University of Nijmegen, PO Box 9010, 6500 GL Nijmegen, The Netherlands 6 Astronomical Institute Anton Pannekoek, University of Amsterdam, Science Park 904, 1098 XH Amsterdam, The Netherlands 7 Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia 8 Space Science Institute, 4750 Walnut street Suite #205, Boulder CO 80301, USA 9 Konkoly Observ., Research Centre f. Astronomy and Earth Sciences, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1121 Budapest, Hungary 10 LESIA, CNRS, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Université Denis Diderot, Observatoire de Paris, 92195 Meudon Cedex, France 11 NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field CA 94035, USA 12 School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Birmingham, Edgebaston, Birmingham B13 2TT, UK 13 Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Villanova University, 800 East Lancaster avenue, Villanova PA 19085, USA 14 Institut d’Astronomie et d’Astrophysique, Univ. -
Stellar Death: White Dwarfs, Neutron Stars, and Black Holes
Stellar death: White dwarfs, Neutron stars & Black Holes Content Expectaions What happens when fusion stops? Stars are in balance (hydrostatic equilibrium) by radiation pushing outwards and gravity pulling in What will happen once fusion stops? The core of the star collapses spectacularly, leaving behind a dead star (compact object) What is left depends on the mass of the original star: <8 M⦿: white dwarf 8 M⦿ < M < 20 M⦿: neutron star > 20 M⦿: black hole Forming a white dwarf Powerful wind pushes ejects outer layers of star forming a planetary nebula, and exposing the small, dense core (white dwarf) The core is about the radius of Earth Very hot when formed, but no source of energy – will slowly fade away Prevented from collapsing by degenerate electron gas (stiff as a solid) Planetary nebulae (nothing to do with planets!) THE RING NEBULA Planetary nebulae (nothing to do with planets!) THE CAT’S EYE NEBULA Death of massive stars When the core of a massive star collapses, it can overcome electron degeneracy Huge amount of energy BAADE ZWICKY released - big supernova explosion Neutron star: collapse halted by neutron degeneracy (1934: Baade & Zwicky) Black Hole: star so massive, collapse cannot be halted SN1006 1967: Pulsars discovered! Jocelyn Bell and her supervisor Antony Hewish studying radio signals from quasars Discovered recurrent signal every 1.337 seconds! Nicknamed LGM-1 now called PSR B1919+21 BRIGHTNESS TIME NATURE, FEBRUARY 1968 1967: Pulsars discovered! Beams of radiation from spinning neutron star Like a lighthouse Neutron -
A Review on Substellar Objects Below the Deuterium Burning Mass Limit: Planets, Brown Dwarfs Or What?
geosciences Review A Review on Substellar Objects below the Deuterium Burning Mass Limit: Planets, Brown Dwarfs or What? José A. Caballero Centro de Astrobiología (CSIC-INTA), ESAC, Camino Bajo del Castillo s/n, E-28692 Villanueva de la Cañada, Madrid, Spain; [email protected] Received: 23 August 2018; Accepted: 10 September 2018; Published: 28 September 2018 Abstract: “Free-floating, non-deuterium-burning, substellar objects” are isolated bodies of a few Jupiter masses found in very young open clusters and associations, nearby young moving groups, and in the immediate vicinity of the Sun. They are neither brown dwarfs nor planets. In this paper, their nomenclature, history of discovery, sites of detection, formation mechanisms, and future directions of research are reviewed. Most free-floating, non-deuterium-burning, substellar objects share the same formation mechanism as low-mass stars and brown dwarfs, but there are still a few caveats, such as the value of the opacity mass limit, the minimum mass at which an isolated body can form via turbulent fragmentation from a cloud. The least massive free-floating substellar objects found to date have masses of about 0.004 Msol, but current and future surveys should aim at breaking this record. For that, we may need LSST, Euclid and WFIRST. Keywords: planetary systems; stars: brown dwarfs; stars: low mass; galaxy: solar neighborhood; galaxy: open clusters and associations 1. Introduction I can’t answer why (I’m not a gangstar) But I can tell you how (I’m not a flam star) We were born upside-down (I’m a star’s star) Born the wrong way ’round (I’m not a white star) I’m a blackstar, I’m not a gangstar I’m a blackstar, I’m a blackstar I’m not a pornstar, I’m not a wandering star I’m a blackstar, I’m a blackstar Blackstar, F (2016), David Bowie The tenth star of George van Biesbroeck’s catalogue of high, common, proper motion companions, vB 10, was from the end of the Second World War to the early 1980s, and had an entry on the least massive star known [1–3]. -
11. Dead Stars
Astronomy 110: SURVEY OF ASTRONOMY 11. Dead Stars 1. White Dwarfs and Supernovae 2. Neutron Stars & Black Holes Low-mass stars fight gravity to a standstill by becoming white dwarfs — degenerate spheres of ashes left over from nuclear burning. If they gain too much mass, however, these ashes can re-ignite, producing a titanic explosion. High-mass stars may make a last stand as neutron stars — degenerate spheres of neutrons. But at slightly higher masses, gravity triumphs and the result is a black hole — an object with a gravitational field so strong that not even light can escape. 1. WHITE DWARFS AND SUPERNOVAE a. Properties of White Dwarfs b. White Dwarfs in Binary Systems c. Supernovae and Remnants White Dwarfs in a Globular Cluster Hubble Space Telescope Finds Stellar Graveyard The Companion of Sirius Sirius weaves in its path; has a companion (Bessel 1844). 1800 1810 1820 1830 1840 1850 1860 1870 “Father, Sirius is a double star!” (Clark 1862). P = 50 yr, a = 19.6 au a3 = M + M ≃ 3 M⊙ P2 A B MA = 2 M⊙, MB = 1 M⊙ Why is the Companion So Faint? LB ≈ 0.0001 LA Because it’s so small! DB = 12000 km < D⊕ ≃ 6 3 ρB 2 × 10 g/cm The Dog Star, Sirius, and its Tiny Companion Origin and Nature A white dwarf is the degenerate carbon/oxygen core left after a double-shell red giant ejects its outer layers. Degeneracy Pressure Electrons are both particles and waves. h λ = The wavelength λ of an electron is me v e Rules for electrons in a box: 1.