Chapter 9
Interstellar gas is typically found in 2 forms:
- HI (H-one) clouds - HII Hot intercloud medium
What are the four main steps of star formation, in order from firs step to last step?
1- Interstellar gas collapses 2- protostars from 3- fusion begins 4- hydrostatic equilibrium is reached
Star formation: ISM collapses, has to overcome what 4 factors that want to push everything outward?
1- Thermal energy in the gas 2- Magnetic fields 3- Rotational motion of the ISM 4- Turbulence in the ISM
What information does 21 cm radiation provide about interstellar gas clouds?
1- their motion and distribution through space 2- their density 3- their temperature
Protostar
A contracting cloud of gas and dust with enough mass to form a star
Difference between proton-proton and CNO cycle
Carbon-12 starts and ends the cycle (it gets recycled - the carbon-12 at the beginning comes back at the end) Includes steps where the protons (hydrogen) combine withcarbon and nitrogen Why is this significant? C and N have a much higher mass than H, which means the energy needed in the process is a lot higher, KE = 12mv 2 . Higher energy = higher temperature. Temperatures greater than 16 million K are required for the CNO chain to take place(T at the center of the Sun is around 15.7 million K). Stars more massive than the Sun (8 times more massive) produce their energy through the CNO cycle/
What supports the helium-rich core of a low mass star?
Electron degeneracy pressure
Types of nebula
Emission, reflection, dark
What inevitable forces a star like the Sun to evolve away from being a main sequence star?
Helium builds up in the core, while the hydrogen burning shell expands
What is the interstellar medium?
Space is full of dust and gas. We call this the interstellar medium, or ISM. The densest clouds of the ISM are where stars are born.
_____________________ provides evidence of stellar evolution
Star clusters
Protostar in the H-R diagram
The birth line is the location on the H-R diagram where a protostar becomes detectable at visible wavelengths .
Why do low-mass stars last longer that high-mass stars?
The fuse more slowly than massive stars, which means they don't use up their source of fuel as fast as high-mass stars
What happens when stars run out of hydrogen in their core?
The outward radiation pressure is too small to overcome the inward pull of gravity, so they being to contract
During the hydrogen shell-burning phase
The star grows bigger and more luminous
Stars within what range of mass ca undergo the helium flash stage of stellar evolution?
Within 0.4 to 2 solar masses
Emission nebula
a glowing gaseous nebula whose light comes from fluorescence caused by a nearby star ionized hydrogen produces hydrogen's reddish-pink emission spectrum.
Dark nebula
a nonluminous nebula of dust and gas that is observable because it obscures light from other sources. visible where dense clouds of gas and dust show up dark against a brighter background (bright because the region is filled with stars or other, brighter nebula).
The HII regions is another name for
an emission nebula
In stars more massive than the Sun, hydrogen is fused into helium through the CNO cycle, a process which utilizes ______________ and occurs at __________________ temperatures than the proton-proton chain
carbon, nitrogen, oxygen; higher
HI
cold (T ∼ 100 K) clouds of neutral atomic or molecular hydrogen I moderate density; about 10 to a few hundred atoms per cubic cm
The overall dimming of starlight matter is called
extinction
Higher mass protostars enter the main sequence:
faster and at a higher luminosity and temperature.
The lifetime of a star depends on
fuel supply and rate of fuel consumption
The interstellar medium is made up of
gas and dust gas: hydrogen and helium dust: carbon and silicon
HII
hot (T ∼ a few 1000 K), ionized hydrogen (HII) I low density; about 0.1 atoms per cubic cm.
Interstellar gas in composed almost entirely of what two gases?
hydrogen and helium
Reflection nebula
interstellar dust that is visible due to reflected light from a nearby star. Such reflection nebulae are bluish in color due to the reflected light. produced when light is scattered by tiny dust particles mixed in with the gas. Characteristic of stars that aren't hot enough to ionize the hydrogen in the nebula.
A protostar becomes a star when
nucelar fusion begins
What type fo radiation is 21-centimeter radiation
radio waves
Interstellar reddening of starlight occurs because the interstellar dust preferentially ________ the blue light.
scatters
Why do reflection nebulae appear blue?
small dust particles scatter blue light at larger angles than they scatter longer wavelength light.
21-centimeter radiation results from the change of the __________ of the electron in a ____________ atom
spin; hydrogen
CNO cycle
the cycle of reactions by which intermediate and high mass stars fuse hydrogen into helium stars produce energy by nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium. In stars, slightly more massive than the Sun, a more powerful energy generation mechanism takes pace: the CNO Cycle: Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen
Which of the following DOES NOT resist the contraction of a cloud of interstellar matter?
thermal motion ✅ rotational motion ✅ magnetic fields ✅ gravity ❌
Open clusters contain a few hundred _______________ stars that are loosely grouped together, while globular clusters are tightly clustered groups of hundreds to thousands of _______________ stars
young; old