Term
what is interstellar medium (ISM)? |
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Definition
gas & dust found in pace btw stars p 512 |
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Term
the very first stars were born from clouds made only of H & He; what elements have they transformed since then and how much? |
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Definition
since that time, stars have transformed small fraction of H & He into heavier elements p 512 |
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Term
what mainly comprises ISM? |
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Definition
70% H; 28% He; 2% other heavy elements p 513 |
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Term
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Definition
in particularly dense & cold interstellar clouds known as molecular clouds p 513 |
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Term
why are molecular clouds called as such? |
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Definition
because they are cold enough & dense enough to allow atoms to combine together into molecules p 513 |
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Term
what is typical temp of molecular cloud? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the average density of molecular cloud? |
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Definition
300 molecules per cubic cm, which is high by interstellar standards, but almost a millions times density of sea level air on Earth p 513 |
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Term
why is molecular H abundant in these clouds, but why can't we easily detect it? |
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Definition
b/c H & He are the most abundant elements and He atoms do not combine with other atoms into molecules; hard to detect because clouds usu too cold to produce emission spectral lines p 513 |
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Term
about how much of a molecular clouds mass is heavier elements? |
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Definition
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Term
which type of photons passes through ISM dust better? one with a short wavelength or a long one? |
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Definition
long, redder photons, e.g. why Sun looks redder at times when viewed through smoke or smog p 515 |
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Term
why does star formation not occur everywhere? |
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Definition
in most places in our galaxy, gravity is not strong enough to overcome internal pressure of interstellar gas (grav. equilibrium); molecular clouds are the exception p 516 |
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Term
what is thermal pressure? |
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Definition
temperature-dependent pressure in ordinary gas clouds (like blowing balloon with air or heating the air, which increases density thus increasing particles movement speedp 516 |
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Term
why can the thermal pressure in most interstellar clouds resist gravity? |
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Definition
b/c their low gas densities keep gravity quite weak p 516 |
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Term
why is gravity strong enough to overcome pressure in a molecular cloud? |
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Definition
gas is denser, so more molecules are packed into each cubic cm, which increases gravity. However, thermal pressure isn't much greater because of low temps p 516 |
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Term
why doesn't gravitational contraction cause pressure to build up in molecular clouds and halt star formation? |
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Definition
b/c they quickly rid themselves of thermal energy that builds up b/c collisions among gas molecules transform the thermal energy into photons that escape thus allowing gravity to overcome thermal pressure p 516 |
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Term
why do stars form in clusters? |
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Definition
b/c gravity is stronger in high-mass cloud p 517 |
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Term
what are 2 factors that likely play important roles in why star-forming clouds with 1000s times mass of Sun resist gravity long enough to grow to large masses before they begin to form stars? |
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Definition
1) gravity must be strong enough to overcome turbulence of gas clumps 2) magnetic fields help the cloud resist gravity |
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Term
how do magnetic fields help the cloud resist gravity? |
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Definition
light from stars is us random, but light passing through ISM often has its electric & magnetic fields aligned in certain directions (polarization p 145) Magnetic field threading thru cloud prevents charge particles from moving perpendicular to the lines. Friction from particles moving along the lines is great enough to inhibit all movement in a cloud. Can halt or slow grav,. collapse. p 517 |
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Term
why doesn't a molecular cloud form one giant star? |
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Definition
gravity follows inverse square law, meaning gravity increases as cloud's size shrinks, giving it an advantage over thermal pressure. because molecular clouds are lumpy, small dense clumps w/in cloud start shrinking on their own, splitting into fragments that become star system p 518 |
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Term
how dense and cool does a cloud need to be to form a star, even if it's not massive? |
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Definition
density of few tens of 1000s of molecules per cubic cm; temp of 10 K p 518 |
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Term
which elements were in the clouds where the very first generation of stars must have been born? |
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Definition
only hydrogen and helium p 519 |
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Term
why don't we find many first-generation stars today? |
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Definition
the high-temp of 1st-generation clouds made it difficult for gravity to overcome pressure meaning they would have formed in hi mass clouds forming hi mass stars, which have short lifetimes p 519 |
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Term
what slows the contraction of a star-forming cloud? |
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Definition
the increased density makes it hard for photons to escape, which raises the temp, which slows the contraction. But begins to change again when the density increases further, changing the collisions back into thermal energy p 520 |
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Term
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Definition
sometimes referred to as a pre-main-sequence star, it is a clump of gas that will become a new star p 520 |
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Term
why is a protostar not yet a true star? |
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Definition
because its cores not yet hot enough for nuclear fusion p 520 |
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Term
what is a protostellar disk? |
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Definition
when a cloud's rotation increases to conserve its total momentum, gas is prevented from raining directly down on a a protostar, and instead settles into a disk p 521 |
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Term
which law do gas particles in a protostellar disk obey? |
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Definition
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Term
what does Kelper's 3rd law cause the gas particles in a protostellar disk to do and what does this eventually do to their orbits? |
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Definition
The outer particles move slower than the inner particles. The difference in orbital speeds creates a rubbing and generates friction and heat p 521 |
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Term
what does the friction and heat cause the gas particles to do and what is this process called? |
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Definition
causes the gas particles's orbits to slow down and fall back down on the disk thereby increasing its mass; process by which material falls onto another body is accretion p 521 |
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Term
what is a likely cause of protostellar jets? |
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Definition
magnetic fields link the angular momentum pf the protostar;s disk to the outflowing gas in the jet. Magnetic field lines passing thru the disk get twisted into rope-like configuration, which may help channel jets of charged particles along the rotation axis p 521-2 Also see Fig 16.15 |
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Term
how do stars become binary? |
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Definition
Gravity pulls 2 neighboring protostars together, but they don't crash because they each need to conserve a retain amount of angular momentum. The larger the momentum, the larger the orbit p 522 |
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Term
how does nuclear fusion begin in a newborn star? |
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Definition
protostar accretes enough mass so its interior becomes very hot. Ultimately, the interior becomes high enough for nuclear fusion p 522 |
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Term
what is the typical central temp of a protostar? |
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Definition
typical central temp of a protostar is 1 million K. It needs to contract further to ignite fusion p 523 |
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Term
When does a protons become a true star? |
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Definition
when its core temp exceeds 10 million K, making it hot enough for hydrogen fusion to operate efficiently. Fusion halts the gravitational contraction and marks what we consider the birth of a star p 523 |
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Term
to what temp does a protostar's surface get where it remains steady for the rest of the contraction process? |
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Definition
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Term
why aren't there stars outside the range of 0.08 and 150 solar mass? |
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Definition
the battle between gravity & degeneracy pressure p 524 |
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Term
the temp of a low-mass star (<0.08 solar mass) never reaches the 10 million K threshold. What kind of pressure halts its grav. contraction? |
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Definition
degeneracy pressure (like chairs in an auditorium; only so many chairs for people [quantum mechanics]) p 524 |
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Term
How does degeneracy pressure differs from thermal pressure? |
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Definition
degeneracy pressure depends only on density and not on temperature p 525 |
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Term
why doesn't the gradual cooling of a brown dwarf's interior weaken its degeneracy pressure? |
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Definition
because degeneracy pressure does NOT rise and fall with temperature p 525 |
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Term
what is the maximum mass of a solar star? |
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Definition
best estimation is 150 solar mass, but not as well defined as minimum mass. Stars in Large Magellanic Cloud have been claimed to be as much as 300 solar masses, but not binary, so we can't infer their masses p 526 |
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Term
what type of pressure is the reason stars have a maximum mass? |
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Definition
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Term
what is radiation pressure? |
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Definition
photons of light exert slight pressure on matter. On Earth, we don't notice it b/c any light source on Earth is small compared to its gravity. However, in massive stars, nuclear fusion generates so much energy that radiation bouncing around inside the stars stronger than thermal pressure p 526 |
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Term
For every star with a mass between 10 and 150 solar masses, how many stars are there between 10 & 2 solar masses? Btw 2 and 0.5? Btw 0.5 and 0.8? |
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Definition
10 stars between 10 and 2 solar masses; 50 between 2 and 0.5; and 200 btw 0.5 and 0.08 p 527 and Fig 16.21 on p 526 |
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Term
Are most stars more or less massive than our Sun? |
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Definition
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