Stars Flashcards

1
Q

Planets

A

1) Objects with mass sufficient for their own gravity to force them to take a spherical shape, where 2) no nuclear fusion occurs, and 3) the object has cleared its orbit of other objects.

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2
Q

dwarf planets

A

Planets where the orbit has not been cleared of other objects.

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3
Q

planetary satellites

A

Bodies that orbit a planet

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4
Q

asteroids

A

Objects which are too small and uneven in shape to be planets, with a near circular orbit around the sun.

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5
Q

comets

A

Small, irregularly sized balls of rock, dust, and ice. They orbit the sun in very elliptical orbits.

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6
Q

Solar systems

A

The systems containing stars and orbiting objects like planets.

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7
Q

galaxy

A

A collection of stars, dust, and gas. Each galaxy contains around 100 billion stars and most galaxies seem to host a supermassive black hole at its centre.

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8
Q

nebulae

A

Gigantic clouds of dust and gas. They are the birthplace of all stars.

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9
Q

How are protostars formed?

A

In nebulae, there are regions that are more dense than others. Over time, gravity draws matter towards them, so these regions gain mass and density. They also get hotter because
GPE is converted into thermal energy. But the temperature at the centre is not hot enough for nuclear fusion to occur.

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10
Q

How are main sequence stars formed from protostars?

A

For a star to form, the temperature and pressure in the centre of the protostar must be high enough for hydrogen gas nuclei to overcome the electrostatic repulsion and undergo nuclear fusion to convert hydrogen into helium. When fusion begins, the protostar becomes a main sequence star, where the outward pressure due to fusion (radiation and gas pressure) and the inward force of gravity are in equilibrium.

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11
Q

Describe how a low-mass main sequence star becomes a red giant.

A

Low-mass stars have a mass between 0.5M☉ and 10M☉. As these stars have a smaller mass, they live for longer, because they burn fuel less quickly. Once the hydrogen fuel in the core runs out, the gravitational force inwards overcomes the radiation and gas pressure, so the core collapses inwards. The core becomes hotter and hotter (as GPE is converted into thermal energy) and begins to fuse helium into heavier elements (up to carbon). The outer layers on top of the core expand and cool down: this is when the star becomes a red giant. A red giant is burning He in the core and H in the outer layers around the core. It has a large luminosity (because the radius is large) and a cooler surface temperature. Because of the cooler surface temperature, it appears red.

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12
Q

Describe the evolution of a red giant into a white dwarf.

A

When the redgiant runs out of fuel, its outer layers expand into interstellar space, creating a planetary nebula. The left-over core contracts further, turning into a hot and dense ball of gas, that we call “white dwarf”. The white dwarf has a temperature of around 30 000K, and no fusion occurs. Photons which were produced earlier in the evolution of the parent star leak out, carrying away heat. This is what produces the luminosity of a white dwarf.
The electron degeneracy pressure (caused as two electrons cannot exist in the same state) prevents the core from collapsing.

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13
Q

Describe the evolution of a high-mass main sequence star into a red supergiant.

A

When the star’s mass is larger than 10 M☉, its evolution takes a different path. As hydrogen supplies deplete, the core contracts. Since the mass is greater, when GPE converts into thermal energy, the core gets much hotter than a red giant, allowing nuclear fusion of heavier and heavier elements to occur (up to iron). The outer layers expand and cool, forming a red supergiant.

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14
Q

Describe the process of the death of a high-mass star.

A

When all of the fuel in a red supergiant is used up, fusion stops (as iron fusion requires more energy than what it releases). Gravity is now the winning force of the tug of war between gravity and pressure. So the core collapses onto itself very rapidly and suddenly becomes rigid (as the matter can no longer be forced any closer together). The outer layers fall inwards and rebound off of the rigid core, launching them out into space as a shockwave. This shockwave is what we observe as a “supernova”, a stellar explosion. The remaining core of a supernova collapses either into a neutron star or black hole, depending on the core mass.

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15
Q

Describe the evolution of a red supergiant into a neutron star or black hole

A

If the remaining core mass is greater than 1.44M☉ but smaller than 3M☉, gravity forces protons and electrons to combine and form neutrons. This produces an extremely small, dense neutron star.
If the remaining core mass is greater than 3M☉, the gravitational forces are so strong that the escape velocity from the core becomes greater than the speed of light. This is a black hole, which even photons cannot escape.

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16
Q

What does a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram look like?

A

There are 3 main clusters: main sequence stars, white dwarfs and giants.
Luminosity (or absolute magnitude) on y-axis.
Temperature (or colour) on x-axis.
Temperature is plotted in descending order.
You must know the position of the Sun on the HR diagram.
You must know the path of a star similar to our Sun on the HR diagram from formation to white dwarf.

17
Q

Describe the process of electrons exciting in discrete energy levels

A

Electrons bound to an atom can only exist in certain discrete energy levels. The electrons cannot have an energy value that is between two levels. Each element has its own set of energy levels.
When an electron moves from a lower energy state to a higher energy state, it is ‘excited’. This requires the input of external energy (e.g. heating or absorbing a photon of the exact energy required). When an electron moves from a higher energy state to a lower energy state, it is ‘de-excited’. A photon is released.

18
Q

All energy level values are negative. True or false?

A

True.
All energy level values are negative, with the ground state being the most negative. An electron that is completely free from an atom (unbound) has energy equal to 0. This negative sign is used to represent the energy required to remove the electron from the atom.

19
Q

What are Emission spectra and how are they formed?

A

what: A series of coloured lines on a black background. 

how: produced by a hot, low-density gas, like that inside of a gas-discharge lamp.

20
Q

What are continuous spectra and how are they formed?

A

what: all visible wavelengths of light are present (rainbow of colours). how: produced by a hot solid or hot, dense gas produce a continuous spectrum.

21
Q

What are absorption spectra and how are they formed?

A

what: A series of dark spectral lines against the background of the continuous spectrum. how: produced when a continuous spectrum source is viewed through a cool, low-density gas. For example, when light from the central layers of a star passes through the outer, cooler layers. Each dark line corresponds to a wavelength of light absorbed by atoms in the outer layers of the star.

22
Q

What happens when an electron is de-excited?

A

When an electron is de-excited, it releases energy as a photon with a specific wavelength. The energy released is the difference between the initial energy level of the electron, and the final energy level of the photon. This means that transitions between different energy levels produce photons with different wavelengths.

23
Q

What are diffraction gratings?

A

Components with regularly spaced slits that can diffract light. Different colours of light have different wavelengths, and so will be diffracted at different angles, with red diffracting more than blue.

24
Q

State Wien’s displacement law

A

The wavelength of emitted radiation at peak intensity is inversely proportional to the surface temperature of the black body.
λ_max * T = 2.9 x 10^-3 m*K

25
Q

State Stefan’s law

A

The power output of a star is directly proportional to its surface area and to its (absolute temperature)^4.
P = σAT^4,
with A = 4piR^2,
R the radius of the star,
and σ the Stephan constant (formula sheet).
For a star, power can also be called “luminosity”.

26
Q

electron degeneracy pressure

A

a quantum mechanics type of pressure whereby highly packed electrons push away from each other. This pressure is responsible for making a white dwarf a stable object.

27
Q

Characteristics of neutron stars

A

Composed of highly-packed neutrons. Typical mass of 2 solar masses. Densities similar to that of nuclear matter (10^17 kg/m^3)

28
Q

Characteristics of black holes

A

Typical mass larger than 3 solar masses. Its gravitational field is so strong that not even light can escape, because photons are infinitely bent inwards by the pull of gravity.

29
Q

How do you work out the frequency of the emitted/absorbed photon as an electron de-excites or excites?

A

ΔE = h*f
Where ΔE is the difference in energy between the two energy levels.
Can workout out wavelength by combining with wave equation

30
Q

Why are spectra the “chemical fingerprints” of a star?

A

Because different atoms have different spectral lines
which can be used to identify elements within
stars.

31
Q

What is the condition for maxima in the spectrum produced by a diffraction grating?

A

dsinθ = nλ
where d is the grating spacing,
θ the angle of the order from the straight-through direction, n the number of the order.

32
Q

Chandrasekhar limit

A

It is equal to 1.44 solar masses. Above this mass, the electron degeneracy pressure is not sufficient to prevent the gravitational collapse and the core will collapse further producing either a neutron star or a black hole.

33
Q

Black body

A

A black body is a hot object that absorbs all radiation incident upon it and whose emission spectrum follows the shape of a Planck curve. Stars can be well approximated as black bodies.