What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Recommended textbook solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Introductory Astronomy

3rd EditionAbe Mizrahi, Edward E. Prather, Gina Brissenden, Jeff P. Adams

429 solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

The Cosmos

4th EditionAlex Filippenko, Jay M. Pasachoff

874 solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

The Cosmic Perspective

8th EditionJeffrey O. Bennett, Mark Voit, Megan O. Donahue, Nicholas O. Schneider

1,638 solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Foundations of Astronomy

11th EditionDana E. Backman, Michael A. Seeds

290 solutions

Recommended textbook solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Introductory Astronomy

3rd EditionAbe Mizrahi, Edward E. Prather, Gina Brissenden, Jeff P. Adams

429 solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Foundations of Astronomy

11th EditionDana E. Backman, Michael A. Seeds

290 solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Foundations of Astronomy

11th EditionDana E. Backman, Michael A. Seeds

290 solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Foundations of Astronomy

13th EditionDana E. Backman, Michael A. Seeds

1,160 solutions

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

Get the answer to your homework problem.

Try Numerade free for 7 days

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

We don’t have your requested question, but here is a suggested video that might help.

what happends first when a star begins to run out of fuel

Discussion

You must be signed in to discuss.

Video Transcript

So what happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel? So, do you even know what is the fuel of stars? So most of you are aware of it. The fuel of Strauss is hydrogen fuel weekends. We say it is hydrogen field. So when a main sequence start beginning to run out of hydrogen fuel, the star becomes a red giant or a red supergiant. So the star, mm hmm, becomes a red giant or even a red supergiant when it runs out of fuel. So the death of a low or medium masters after a low or medium mask or star has become a red giant. The outer parts grow bigger and drift into the space. What happens when it becomes too rigid? And so, um the outer parts grow bigger, the outer but grow bigger? And then what happens that bigger parts drifts are drifted into the space. So they drift mhm into space. Now, after they drift into space, that drift will be forming a cloud of gas called less uh planetary nebula. So as soon as they are different into space, the form a cloud of gas gold in a tree nebula 23 and then build up. So this was the whole theory or explanation

The Life Cycles of Stars: How Supernovae Are Formed

It is very poetic to say that we are made from the dust of the stars. Amazingly, it's also true! Much of our bodies, and our planet, are made of elements that were created in the explosions of massive stars. Let's examine exactly how this can be.

Life Cycles of Stars

A star's life cycle is determined by its mass. The larger its mass, the shorter its life cycle. A star's mass is determined by the amount of matter that is available in its nebula, the giant cloud of gas and dust from which it was born. Over time, the hydrogen gas in the nebula is pulled together by gravity and it begins to spin. As the gas spins faster, it heats up and becomes as a protostar. Eventually the temperature reaches 15,000,000 degrees and nuclear fusion occurs in the cloud's core. The cloud begins to glow brightly, contracts a little, and becomes stable. It is now a main sequence star and will remain in this stage, shining for millions to billions of years to come. This is the stage our Sun is at right now.

As the main sequence star glows, hydrogen in its core is converted into helium by nuclear fusion. When the hydrogen supply in the core begins to run out, and the star is no longer generating heat by nuclear fusion, the core becomes unstable and contracts. The outer shell of the star, which is still mostly hydrogen, starts to expand. As it expands, it cools and glows red. The star has now reached the red giant phase. It is red because it is cooler than it was in the main sequence star stage and it is a giant because the outer shell has expanded outward. In the core of the red giant, helium fuses into carbon. All stars evolve the same way up to the red giant phase. The amount of mass a star has determines which of the following life cycle paths it will take from there.

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

The life cycle of a low mass star (left oval) and a high mass star (right oval).

The illustration above compares the different evolutionary paths low-mass stars (like our Sun) and high-mass stars take after the red giant phase. For low-mass stars (left hand side), after the helium has fused into carbon, the core collapses again. As the core collapses, the outer layers of the star are expelled. A planetary nebula is formed by the outer layers. The core remains as a white dwarf and eventually cools to become a black dwarf.

On the right of the illustration is the life cycle of a massive star (10 times or more the size of our Sun). Like low-mass stars, high-mass stars are born in nebulae and evolve and live in the Main Sequence. However, their life cycles start to differ after the red giant phase. A massive star will undergo a supernova explosion. If the remnant of the explosion is 1.4 to about 3 times as massive as our Sun, it will become a neutron star. The core of a massive star that has more than roughly 3 times the mass of our Sun after the explosion will do something quite different. The force of gravity overcomes the nuclear forces which keep protons and neutrons from combining. The core is thus swallowed by its own gravity. It has now become a black hole which readily attracts any matter and energy that comes near it. What happens between the red giant phase and the supernova explosion is described below.

From Red Giant to Supernova: The Evolutionary Path of High Mass Stars

Once stars that are 5 times or more massive than our Sun reach the red giant phase, their core temperature increases as carbon atoms are formed from the fusion of helium atoms. Gravity continues to pull carbon atoms together as the temperature increases and additional fusion processes proceed, forming oxygen, nitrogen, and eventually iron.

What happens first when a star begins to run out of fuel?

The two supernovae, one reddish yellow and one
blue, form a close pair just below the image center
(to the right of the galaxy nucleus)
Image Credit: C. Hergenrother, Whipple Observatory,
P. Garnavich, P.Berlind, R.Kirshner (CFA).
When the core contains essentially just iron, fusion in the core ceases. This is because iron is the most compact and stable of all the elements. It takes more energy to break up the iron nucleus than that of any other element. Creating heavier elements through fusing of iron thus requires an input of energy rather than the release of energy. Since energy is no longer being radiated from the core, in less than a second, the star begins the final phase of gravitational collapse. The core temperature rises to over 100 billion degrees as the iron atoms are crushed together. The repulsive force between the nuclei overcomes the force of gravity, and the core recoils out from the heart of the star in a shock wave, which we see as a supernova explosion.

As the shock encounters material in the star's outer layers, the material is heated, fusing to form new elements and radioactive isotopes. While many of the more common elements are made through nuclear fusion in the cores of stars, it takes the unstable conditions of the supernova explosion to form many of the heavier elements. The shock wave propels this material out into space. The material that is exploded away from the star is now known as a supernova remnant.

The hot material, the radioactive isotopes, as well as the leftover core of the exploded star, produce X-rays and gamma-rays.

For the Student

Using the above background information, (and additional sources of information from the library or the web), make your own diagram of the life cycle of a high-mass star.

For the Student

Using the text, and any external printed references, define the following terms: protostar, life cycle, main sequence star, red giant, white dwarf, black dwarf, supernova, neutron star, pulsar, black hole, fusion, element, isotope, X-ray, gamma-ray.


Reference URLs:

Supernovae
http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/science/objects/supernovae1.html
http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/science/objects/supernovae2.html

Life Cycles of Stars
http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/educators/lifecycles/stars.html


Back to the Main Spectra Unit Menu