Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington.

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Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Transcript of Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington.

Page 1: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington.

Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3

Julie Lutz

University of Washington

Page 2: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington.

So We’ve Covered

• Basic physical parameters of stars

• Star clusters

• Interstellar medium

• How stars form and land on the main sequence

• Energy source on main sequence is H to He fusion.

Page 3: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington.
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What About the Extremes of Mass in Star Formation?

• Most massive stars observed are about 150 solar masses.

• Very rare!• Beyond that mass,

hard for star to hold itself together for long

• Internal energy trumps gravity

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Lower Limit for Thermonuclear Fusion ~ 0.08 Solar Mass

• What happens if the mass of a forming object is less than that?

• It can still coalesce under forces of self-gravity, magnetic fields, etc.

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Brown Dwarf Stars

• Show up at infrared wavelengths

• No thermonuclear reactions

• Fully gaseous and convective throughout

• Energy source is gravitational contraction

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Masses of Brown Dwarfs

• From about 75-80 times the mass of Jupiter

• To about 15-20 times the mass of Jupiter

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Low Surface Temperatures

• Visible in infrared• Molecules in

atmosphere (methane, ammonia, water, etc)

• Surface temperatures about 2000-500 K

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First Brown Dwarf Discovered in 1995…Many Since Then

• If brown dwarfs exist, then maybe planets around other stars could exist, too.

• Had been hunting for extrasolar planets since 1940s without success until….

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First Extrasolar Planet Discovered in 1995

• Tiny shifts in spectral lines due to planet influencing its star due to gravity

• See star’s spectrum shift periodically--can’t see planet directly

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51 Pegasi

• Star that is very much like the sun in temperature and size

• Planet has a 4 hour orbit around star

• Yes, that’s VERY close

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Artist’s Concept of 51 Cyg Star and Planet

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Extrasolar Planets: Strategies and Methods for Searching

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Planet-Hunting Strategies

• Look at stars like the sun first (particularly if your hunting technique requires observing one star at a time).

• If you can analyze many stars at one go, look at them all!

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Doppler Shifts in Star’s Spectrum

• Small effect, need large telescope to detect.

• Ground-based• Many discoveries.

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Transits

• Planet orbit oriented so it comes in front of its parent star periodically

• Causes a TINY dip in brightness because star is enormously brighter than planet

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Space Missions

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Kepler Mission--March 6, 2009

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Kepler’s cameras take images of the same field every few seconds

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Detecting a Transiting Planet with a Ground-Based Telescope

• Can be done, but requires a large telescope and a lot of images.

• First discovery announced in 2009

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Direct Imaging

• Very difficult because star is so bright.• Best in infrared• Must block out as much starlight as possible

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Ground-based Discoveries Come from Largest Telescopes

• Keck 10-m telescopes (Mauna Kea)

• Gemini 8-m telescopes (Mauna Kea and Chile)

• Subaru (Mauna Kea)• VLT (Chile)

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About 500 Discovered So Far

• One star is now known to have 5 planets

• As techniques get better, expect MANY more discoveries

• Both ground-based and space observatories

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Hope Eventually to Discover Earth-sized Planets

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Recent Claim of an Earth-like Planet (Oct 2010)

• Gleise 581g• Orbiting a red main

sequence star• One of 7 planets• In the “Goldilocks”

zone (liquid water)• DISCOVERY

UNDER DISPUTE!

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The Future

• Likely 1000s will be discovered by various techniques

• Will start getting an idea of how common they are, what kinds of stars have planets, how many planets around a star

• Start learning a bit about the planets besides their masses and orbital periods

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Extrasolar Planetary Atmospheres

• Sodium• Water• Methane• Wind velocities in atmosphere, densities, etc

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What Happens to Stars After the Main Sequence?

• Eventually all the hydrogen will be converted to helium in the star’s core.

• The star will lack an energy source to counterbalance the inward push of gravity.

Page 32: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington.

Let’s Consider How Long It Will Take to Convert H to He in Core

• Thermonuclear reaction rate for H to He fusion depends on mass, density, temperature

• More massive stars do it much faster than less massive

• Calculate

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Results

• A 1 solar mass star will stay on the main sequence about 12 billion years.

• Sun age 5 billion years• 120 solar mass-

20,000years• .08 solar mass--35

billion years

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What Happens After Main Sequence?

• Star’s core collapses; outer layers respond by expanding and cooling.

• Star becomes a giant or a supergiant (depends on mass)

• Size of 10s to 100s times main sequence

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What Happens to the Sun?

• In about 7 billion years the sun will become a giant star and will swell to roughly 30x its present size, engulfing Mercury and Venus

• This will take only about 50,000 years.

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The Sun as a Giant Star

• While the outer part of the sun is expanding, the interior is heating up and eventually gets hot enough to fuse helium atoms into carbon atoms

• Hydrogen to helium fusion in a shell around core

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H-R Diagram, 1 Msun

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Stellar Middle Age

• Stars no longer hang out on the Main Sequence

• They move around in the giant and supergiant regions--patterns and timescales depend on mass

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Fifteen Solar Masses

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Antares

• Red supergiant• 15x mass of sun• 700x diameter of sun• Picture shows both the

star and the mass that it is losing in the form of gas and dust.

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Antares is in Constellation of Scorpius the Scorpion

• Star name means “Rival of Mars”.

• Mars is also red.• Scorpion that stung

and killed Orion• Maui’s Hook

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Page 45: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington.

Giant/Supergiant Stages

• While the He is being converted to C in the core, there is a zone of H to He fusion surrounding the core

• When the core is all C, further changes occur and C to O fusion starts (with zones of He to C and H to He surrounding)

• Stars get an “onion” structure

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The Outer Layers Change

• In part a response to what’s going on in the interior.

• At some stages stars can pulsate on timescales of days.

• They constantly lose mass from outer layers.

• We can follow these changes by calculating evolutionary tracks.

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Some Comments on Stellar Middle Age

• The Sun (and other stars less than about 10 solar masses) will never be a supergiant.

• Stars more massive than about 10 solar masses do get to be supergiants.

• The massive stars fuse elements up to iron and they do it fast…timescales 1000s of years.

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For Example, Cepheid Variables

• Named after delta Cephei, 4th brightest star in Cepheus.

• Varies by 0.7 mag with a period of 4.2 days.

• Star (a yellow giant) is pulsating.

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Mira-A Red Giant That Pulsates

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Mira Is in a Binary System

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And It’s Moving 290,000 mi/hr Losing Mass

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Even Red Dwarfs Have Interesting Things Going On

• They are by far the most common kind of star.

• Still on MS--slow evolution

• Have major flares• Planets

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One Future Project

• Large Synoptic Survey Telescope• Start 2015, located in Chile• Will survey entire visible sky every 3 nights• UW is a major partner!

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Conclusions

• About 500 stars are known to have one or more planets; many more discoveries ahead.

• Stellar evolution rates depend on mass. More massive=faster

• Stars move off the main sequence in response to changes in energy source and become giants or supergiants.