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A JOURNEY TO THE STARS
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A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

Dec 14, 2015

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Noelia Jerome
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Page 1: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

A JOURNEY TO THE STARS

Page 2: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

WHAT IS A STAR?

The star shines due to a process called …

A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen & some helium) that shines at its core

NUCLEAR FUSION

This is a nuclear reaction where 2 or more atomic nuclei collide at very high speeds & fuse to form a new type of atom. This causes the release of an enormous amount of energy in the form of light!

Page 3: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

HOW A STAR IS BORN

At this point the star begins to shine, however its hot core remains surrounded by gas and dust. As the star shines, enormous energy is created which blows the nebula away.

Stars are born out of a vast cloud of dust & gas called a NEBULA. Inside the nebula, gravitational pull causes the atoms of the dust and gas to clump together and become dense.

Over time, the center of the nebula becomes more and more dense and the tightly-packed atoms begin to heat up this causes hydrogen to fuse into helium via nuclear fusion!

A new, forming star is called a PROTOSTAR

Page 4: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.
Page 5: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

LIFE CYCLE OF STARS

All stars have a life! They go through the stages of birth, development, and finally death.

How a star evolves in its lifetime depends on its original mass

Stars have 3 general mass categories:

• Small or low-mass stars

• Medium or medium-mass stars our sun is this!

• Large or high-mass stars

Page 6: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

LOW MASS STARS

• Have less mass than our Sun

• Called RED DWARFS

• Uses nuclear fusion to produce energy for as long as 100 billion years! Hydrogen is consumed VERY SLOWLY!

• The star eventually cools to become a very faint WHITE DWARF

Most of the stars in the Universeare Red Dwarfs!

Page 7: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

MEDIUM MASS STARS

• Have mass comparable to our Sun

• Hydrogen is consumed faster over a period of • about 10 billion years

• The outer layers are cool and appear red RED GIANT

Our Sun will become a Red Giant in about5 billion years!

• When the hydrogen is used up, the core slowly collapses raising the temperature inside the star & expanding the outer layers

• Eventually the layers disappear and it becomes a WHITE DWARF

Page 8: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

HIGH MASS STARS

• Have mass greater than our Sun

• Hydrogen is consumed over a period of about 7 billion years

• High mass stars always come to a violent end! The core collapses and the outer layers explode called a SUPERNOVA

• The remaining inner core material packs tightly together forming a NEUTRON STAR

• As it uses up its hydrogen, it swells to become a red SUPER GIANT

• Gases drift off to become NEBULAS (which will start the life cycle of a star once again)

Page 9: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

HIGH MASS STARS (continued …)

• High mass stars that are extremely large (30 times the mass of the sun), end their life as a BLACK HOLE

• The supernova explosion is so massive that gravity becomes a crushing force even light cannot escape a black hole’s gravity!

Page 10: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.
Page 11: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.

COLOUR OF STARS

The brightness of a star is referred to as luminosity

The colour of a star depends its temperature. The temperature of a star, and therefore its colour, actually depends on the amount of mass it has.

Very massive stars are the hottest and tend to have a bluish glow

Small stars are the coolest and tend to have a reddish glow

Our sun is somewhere in the middle and has a yellowish glow

Page 12: A JOURNEY TO THE STARS. WHAT IS A STAR? The star shines due to a process called … A star is a hot ball of plasma (electrically charged gases, mainly hydrogen.