DATE | Mar 11 Thursday |
TITLE | The Main Sequence |
READING | Chapter 11.2, 13.1, 13.3 |
MAIN CONCEPTS | Principles of Stellar Structure, Energy Production/Transport, Nuclear Processes, Production of Elements, Interior Probes |
Stellar Structure:
There is a nice summary of the principles of stellar structure in Fig. 13.1.
At its most basic, the life of a star is a struggle between gravity (which
tries to crush it) and pressure (which can hold it up). For main sequence
stars, the pressure is generated by heat, which is generated by nuclear
fusion (in particular, hydrogen burning). High density and temperature are
needed to allow fusion, so the star collapses until its core reaches a state
where enough fusion takes place to halt further collapse. The conditions when
this occurs vary by stellar mass (more massive stars must generate more pressure
to hold up their greater weight); this is the reason for the "main sequence"
which just expresses (with observable quantities) the amount of fusion and the
size the star takes.
Of course, the heat generated by fusion does not stay in the core. It is passed
out through the star either by direct radiation (carried by photons)
or by convection (carried by motion of hot gases). The choice between
these is made by whichever is easier - radiation is preferred unless the material
is too opaque (non-transparent) or the amount of energy to be carried
is too great. Cooler material is more opaque, so the outsides of cool stars
are convective and their interiors are radiative. In hot stars so much energy
is generated in a small volume in the core that the core is convective, while
the larger envelope stays hot enough that radiation is preferred. Energy always
leaves the surface of the star by radiation - that is why stars shine.
Nuclear Terminology:
Nuclei consist of protons and neutrons. An "element" is
defined by the number of protons in a nucleus. The various numbers of neutrons
that can go with a certain number of protons yield the "isotopes" of
that element. The mutual repulsion of the protons is overcome by the "strong
nuclear force"; this also means that there should be approximately the same
number of neutrons and protons (to provide sufficient "glue"). One proton by
itself is also called "hydrogen". A bare helium-4 nucleus (2 protons,
2 neutrons) is sometimes called an "alpha particle". Neutrons are not
stable by themselves; outside nuclei they will decay in about 10 minutes to
a proton and an electron. This is mediated by the "weak nuclear force".
One can also have a proton turning into a neutron under special circumstances;
it then dumps its positive charge as an anti-electon (positron) and a
neutrino (a very low mass, very weakly interacting particle that carries
off other needed quantum properties). The positron is an example of antimatter:
each kind of particle has a corresponding antiparticle; when the two meet they
are fully annihalated yielding the energy given by E=mc2.
Neutrinos are so weakly interacting that they can pass right through the whole
Sun (on average) without hitting anything.
Stellar Fusion and the production of elements:
The main sequence phase in a stars life is the time during which it is converting
hydrogen to helium in its core. In stars up to about twice the mass of the Sun,
hydrogen burning takes place by the "p-p chain" (proton-proton). Any
fusion requires that the mutual electric repulsion of the protons in a nucleus
be overcome by slamming them together sufficiently hard that they approach close
enough that the "strong nuclear force" makes them stick. The higher the temperature,
the faster they move; the higher the density the more collisions there are.
Other rules must also be obeyed; nuclei cannot consist of arbitary combinations
of neutrons and protons. So the pp chain starts by colliding 2 protons together
and having one of them change to a neutron at the same time. This is very unlikely,
but there are a lot of collisions taking place in a stellar core! A positron
and neutrino are emitted; the positron immediately annihalates an electron and
energy is produced. That makes deuterium, and it is then relatively easy
to add another proton, making "helium-3". The mass of this is slightly
less than of the particles that made it up (binding energy is lower) and some
energy is emitted. Finally, 2 helium-3 nuclei can collide and yield an alpha
particle plus two fast moving protons.
The net result is that 4 protons have been made into an alpha particle, and
0.7% of the mass energy of the particles has been converted to heat. The neutrinos
that are produced escape immediately, providing us with an instantaneous probe
of energy production in the Sun. It was worrisome that only a third of the expected
neutrinos are seen; we now think that this is because there are 3 types of neutrinos,
they can change types, and we are only measuring one of the types.
In more massive stars the hydrogen burning proceeds in a different way, using
carbon as a catalyst. That means that the carbon is left unchanged in the end,
and 4 protons are converted to helium (using carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen as
intermediaries). This process (which is also hydrogen burning) is called the
"CNO cycle". The CNO must have already been there; these are the most
common products of stellar fusion and are the most abundant elements after H
and He. Carbon is produced in stellar cores after hydrogen is burned to helium.
When the temperature and density are sufficiently increased by further core
collapse, 3 alpha particles are combined together (through intermediate steps)
to make a carbon nucleus. This is called the "triple-alpha reaction",
and goes on in stars when they are giants. Low mass stars must stop here, but
high mass stars can go on to make all the other elements. The stars that are
forming today contain elements that were produced in previous generations of
stars. As, of course, were all the elements in your body (except hydrogen).