Shilpa Khichar
Karolina Drewnik
In some places, this interstellar medium is collected into a big cloud of dust and gas known as a nebula. This is the birthplace of stars because the gas and dust is what makes up a star. In fact, our sun was probably born in a nebula nearly 5 billion years ago.
The protostar phase of stellar evolution lasts about 100,000 years.
begins when material stops falling onto the protostar, and it’s releasing a tremendous amount of energy
may be bright, but this all comes its gravitational energy from the collapsing material
the central temperature of a T Tauri star isn’t enough to support fusion at its core
can appear as bright as main sequence stars
The T Tauri phase lasts for about 100 million years.
STEP 1:
Nuclear fusion. The fuel for fusion is hydrogen, and it is fused into helium. Gravity is constant and pulls atoms inward, and gas pressure from the outer shell and from the gases fusing the core resist gravity (push out). The gas pressure largely depends upon temperature, so as long as the core of the star is hot enough, the gas pressure can resist gravity.
Step 2:
The star has achieved equilibrium, the gas pressure is balanced with force of gravity.
Step 3:
Fusion stops, and core temperature drops.
Nearly all of the hydrogen has been converted to helium.
Without hydrogen fusing into helium, the core temperature of the star will drop.
Gas pressure cannot resist gravity anymore.
Step 4:
The core contracts.
Gravity is winning the battle aganist gas pressure, so the core will contract.
As the core "shrinks", the atoms in the core become more tighitly packed together (dense).
The denser the core becomes, the more the temperature increases.
Step 5:
As the temperature increases, there are more atoms and thus more atomic collisions.
With increasing temperature and density, the core can rise to a hot enough temperature to begin nuclear fusion again. the cycle continues until the hydrogen fuel is gone.
The stars main goal in life is to achieve stability, or equilibrium. The term equilibrium does not mean that there isnt any change in the star. It just means that there is not a net overall change in the star.
In a stable star, the gas pressure pushing out from the center is equal with the gravity pulling atoms inward to the center when these forces are equal, the star is at equilibrium.
Once a star reaches equilibrium for the first time, it will start burning (fusing) hydrogen into helium.
This is an X-ray image from the Yohkoh satelite.
it will cool down over hundreds of billions of years, eventually becoming the background temperature of the Universe
The sun is a single star, but it does not have enough mass to become a supernova
In 1604, Johannes Kepler discovered the last observed supernova in the Milky Way. NASA’s Chandra telescope discovered the remains of a more recent supernova. It exploded in the Milky Way more than a hundred years ago.
On the right is Supernova 1987A after the star has exploded. On the left is the star before it exploded.
An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls matter from blue star beside it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iauIP8swfBY