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

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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
Page 4: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 5: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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.

Page 6: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Brown Dwarf Stars

• Show up at infrared wavelengths

• No thermonuclear reactions

• Fully gaseous and convective throughout

• Energy source is gravitational contraction

Page 7: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Masses of Brown Dwarfs

• From about 75-80 times the mass of Jupiter

• To about 15-20 times the mass of Jupiter

Page 8: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Low Surface Temperatures

• Visible in infrared• Molecules in

atmosphere (methane, ammonia, water, etc)

• Surface temperatures about 2000-500 K

Page 9: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington
Page 10: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington
Page 11: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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….

Page 12: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 13: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington
Page 14: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 15: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Artist’s Concept of 51 Cyg Star and Planet

Page 16: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Extrasolar Planets: Strategies and Methods for Searching

Page 17: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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!

Page 18: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Doppler Shifts in Star’s Spectrum

• Small effect, need large telescope to detect.

• Ground-based• Many discoveries.

Page 19: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 20: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Space Missions

Page 21: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Kepler Mission--March 6, 2009

Page 22: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 23: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 24: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Direct Imaging

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

Page 25: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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)

Page 26: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 27: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Hope Eventually to Discover Earth-sized Planets

Page 28: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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!

Page 29: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 30: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Extrasolar Planetary Atmospheres

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

Page 31: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 33: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 34: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 35: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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.

Page 36: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 37: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

H-R Diagram, 1 Msun

Page 38: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington
Page 39: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington
Page 40: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 41: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Fifteen Solar Masses

Page 42: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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.

Page 43: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 44: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington
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

Page 46: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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.

Page 47: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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.

Page 48: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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.

Page 49: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Mira-A Red Giant That Pulsates

Page 50: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

Mira Is in a Binary System

Page 51: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 52: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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

Page 53: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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!

Page 54: Red Stars, Blue Stars, Old Stars, New Stars Session 3 Julie Lutz University of Washington

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.