4.4-5 Flashcards

1
Q

Hydrogen Burning Zone Composition

A

Typical elements:

  • 1H, 2H
  • 3He, 4He
  • 12C
  • 14N
  • 16O
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2
Q

Hydrogen Burning in Low Mass Stars

what is low mass and which reaction is involved?

A
  • Occurs in stars < 3 M
  • Involves proton-proton (pp) chain reactions
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3
Q

First two reactions in PP chain

A
  • 2 · 1H → 2H + e+ + 𝛎
  • 2H + 1H → 3He + γ
  • 3He proceeds through three alternative branches: pp1, pp2, pp3 chain with pp1 the most dominant branch
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4
Q

PP1 Reaction

A

2 · 3He → 4He + 2 · 1H

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5
Q

Reaction preceding pp2 and pp3 chain

A

3He + 4He → 7Be + γ

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6
Q

PP2 Reaction

A
  • 7Be + e-7Li + 𝛎
  • 7Li + 1H → 2 · 4He
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7
Q

PP3 Reaction

A
  • 7Be + 1H → 8B + γ
  • 8B → 8Be + e+ + 𝛎
  • 8Be → 2 · 4He
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8
Q

CNO Cycle in High Mass Stars

when does it occur and what processes are involved?

A
  • Occurs in stars > 3 M
  • Carbon-Nitrogen-Oxygen (CNO) cycle with:
    proton capture (4x)
    β+-decay (2x)
    – 𝛂-decay (1x)
  • Carbon, nitrogen and oxygen present and act as catalysts then hydrogen synthesized into helium in CNO cycle
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9
Q

Slowest Process in CNO Cycle

A

Proton capture by 14N

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10
Q

Products of CNO Burning

A
  • He
  • 14N
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11
Q

He-Burning and Triple-Alpha Reaction

A

Involves 4He particles. Occurs after hydrogen is exhausted.

4He + 4He + 4He -> 12C + γ.

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12
Q

Alternative He-Burning Reaction

A

12C + 4He → 16O + γ

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13
Q

Fate of Low Mass Stars

A

Stars < 8 M:

  • End with a carbon-oxygen rich core
  • They form planetary nebulae
  • Then cool down to white dwarfs
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14
Q

Nuclear Processes in High Mass Stars

A

Stars > 8 M:

  • undergo additional nuclear processes:
    Carbon burning
    Oxygen burning
    Silicon burning
  • leading to an onion structure with various layers of elements (lightest to heaviest except N & C):
    – H
    – He & N
    – C & O
    – Ne & Mg
    – Si
    – Fe

where the last three lines are products of the respective burning above.

Heather and Henry Noted Clouds Over New Mexico, Savoring Iron Flavored Enchiladas.

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15
Q

Solar Neutrino Experiments

A

Focus on detecting neutrinos from the sun, with experiments like:

  • 1) Davis
    – reaction 37Cl + v_sun -> 37Ar + e-
    – n + v -> p + e
    – neutrino energy of E(v) > 0.81 MeV can be detected
    – detected only 1/3 of expected neutrino flux
  • 2) Kamiokande
    – Cerenkov radiation from neutrino collision with water
    – works only for E(v) > 7 MeV
    – proven that they come from sun
    – detection rate was ≈ 0.5 SNU (solar nutrino unit)
  • 3) Gallium
    – 71Ga + v_sun -> 71Ga + e-
    – E(v) > 0.2 MeV from pp-chain detected
    – no doubt on the solar model (Luminosity of sun)
    – but still only 1/2 SUN detected
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16
Q

Final Outcome of Neutrino Experiments

A
  • Confirmed the model for nuclear burning in the sun
  • Indicated neutrino oscillation and mass
    Discrepancy
  • three types of neutrinos: electron, muon, tau
  • solar reactions produce only electron neutrinos and experiments can only detect electron neutrinos
  • possible for one type of neutrino to spontaneously convert into other type
  • discrepancy of measured SNU to theoretical SNU: some of electron neutrinos converted and then not detected
17
Q

What is SNU?

A
  • Solar Neutrino Units
  • 10-36 interactions per target atom per second