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CHAPTER 7 — STARS: BIRTH, LIFE & DEATH - Printable Version +- The Lumin Archive (https://theluminarchive.co.uk) +-- Forum: The Lumin Archive — Core Forums (https://theluminarchive.co.uk/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Courses — Structured Learning (https://theluminarchive.co.uk/forumdisplay.php?fid=69) +---- Forum: Introduction to Astrophysics — Course Overview (https://theluminarchive.co.uk/forumdisplay.php?fid=70) +---- Thread: CHAPTER 7 — STARS: BIRTH, LIFE & DEATH (/showthread.php?tid=183) |
CHAPTER 7 — STARS: BIRTH, LIFE & DEATH - Leejohnston - 11-15-2025 Chapter 7 — Stars: Birth, Life & Death Stars are the engines of the universe. They create light, heat, and the elements that make planets — and life — possible. Astrophysics cannot be understood without understanding stars. This chapter explains how stars form, live, evolve, and ultimately die. --- 7.1 What Is a Star? A star is a massive sphere of hot gas held together by gravity and powered by nuclear fusion in its core. • Gravity pulls the star inward • Fusion pushes outward When these two forces balance, the star is stable. --- 7.2 How Stars Are Born Stars form inside giant clouds of gas and dust called nebulae. The stages of star formation: 1. **Cloud collapses** under gravity 2. A dense core forms (a protostar) 3. Temperature rises 4. When the core reaches ~10 million °C, hydrogen fusion begins 5. The star “ignites” and enters the main sequence This process takes millions of years. --- 7.3 The Main Sequence — A Star’s Lifetime Most of a star’s life is spent on the main sequence, where hydrogen fusion occurs. The key rule: Mass determines destiny. • Small stars → live longer, burn slowly • Large stars → live shorter, burn violently Typical main sequence lifetimes: • Red dwarf: trillions of years • Sun-like star: 10 billion years • Massive star: a few million years The Sun is currently halfway through its lifespan. --- 7.4 Fusion Inside Stars Nuclear fusion occurs when hydrogen atoms combine to form helium. Fusion releases enormous amounts of energy because: A small amount of mass is converted to energy. This energy: • Counteracts gravity • Heats the star • Produces the light we see from Earth Different masses use different fusion pathways: • Small stars: proton–proton chain • Large stars: CNO cycle (much faster) --- 7.5 What Happens When Hydrogen Runs Out When a star exhausts hydrogen in its core: • Gravity wins • The core contracts • Outer layers expand The star becomes: A red giant (Sun-like star) or A red supergiant (massive star) The core becomes hot enough to fuse new elements: • Sun-like stars fuse helium → carbon • Massive stars fuse up to iron Iron is the “dead end” — fusion of iron *absorbs* energy. --- 7.6 The Death of Stars Low-Mass Stars (like the Sun): 1. Become a red giant 2. Shed their outer layers (planetary nebula) 3. Leave behind a white dwarf 4. White dwarf slowly cools into a black dwarf High-Mass Stars: 1. Become red supergiants 2. Core collapses violently 3. Star explodes as a supernova 4. Leftover core becomes either: • a neutron star • or a black hole Massive stars recycle heavy elements into the universe — everything on Earth was forged inside stars. --- 7.7 Stellar Remnants White dwarfs: Earth-sized, extremely dense, slowly cooling stellar cores. Neutron stars: Supernova remnants made almost entirely of neutrons. A teaspoon of neutron star material weighs a billion tonnes. Black holes: Regions where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. --- 7.8 Stars and the Element Cycle Every atom in your body — carbon, oxygen, calcium, iron — was created by stars. • Hydrogen & helium → from the Big Bang • Carbon, oxygen, nitrogen → red giants • Iron → massive stars • Gold, uranium → neutron star collisions Stars are cosmic factories. --- Chapter Summary • Stars form from collapsing clouds of gas and dust. • They stabilise once fusion balances gravity. • Mass determines the lifetime and fate of a star. • Sun-like stars end as white dwarfs. • Massive stars explode as supernovae and form neutron stars or black holes. • Stars create the elements necessary for planets and life. --- Practice Questions 1. What triggers the birth of a star from a nebula? 2. Why does mass determine a star’s lifetime? 3. What happens to a star when its core hydrogen runs out? 4. What is the difference between a white dwarf, neutron star, and black hole? 5. Why are massive stars important for the existence of heavy elements? --- Written and Compiled by Lee Johnston — Founder of The Lumin Archive |