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Supernova explosions

Supernova explosions. Supernova explosions. The lives of stars Type I supernovae Destruction of white dwarfs Type II supernovae Core collapse of massive stars What’s left behind? Pulsars Black Holes. 0. Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. 0. Nova Explosions.

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Supernova explosions

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  1. Supernova explosions

  2. Supernova explosions • The lives of stars • Type I supernovae • Destruction of white dwarfs • Type II supernovae • Core collapse of massive stars • What’s left behind? • Pulsars • Black Holes

  3. 0 Hertzsprung-Russell diagram

  4. 0 Nova Explosions Hydrogen accreted through the accretion disk accumulates on the surface of the white dwarf • Very hot, dense layer of non-fusing hydrogen on the white dwarf surface Nova Cygni 1975 • Explosive onset of H fusion • Nova explosion

  5. Artist’s impression of a nova

  6. 0 The Chandrasekhar Limit The more massive a white dwarf, the smaller it is. Pressure becomes larger, until electron degeneracy pressure can no longer hold off gravity > Type I supernova WDs with more than ~ 1.4 solar masses can not exist!

  7. Evolution of high-mass stars

  8. 0 Time-scales and conditions No need to memorize these numbers. Main thing is to appreciate the differences in the numbers for each evolutionary stage.

  9. Core collapse - a star in gravitational free-fall (Q1)

  10. Artist’s impression of a supernova Supernova facts ~1/100 yr in our Galaxy ~1/second in Universe Only 0.01% of energy released in visible light! p + e -> n + neutrino Most of energy is in the form of neutrinos!

  11. 0 Neutrinos • Elementary particle postulated in 1930 • First detected in 1942 • Miniscule mass and no electric charge • Come in three “flavors” • electron- muon- and tau- • Interact only weakly with other matter

  12. 0 Detecting neutrinos Sudbury neutrino detector

  13. Historical Supernovae (Q 2) The youngest supernova explosion occurred in ~1868 and astronomers have just discovered the remnant in the X-ray image shown on the right. The explosion occurred close to the center of our Galaxy and the optical light was obscured from view. www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chandra/news/08-062.html

  14. 0 The Famous Supernova of 1987: Supernova 1987A Before At maximum Unusual type II supernova in the Large Magellanic Cloud in Feb. 1987

  15. How much energy is liberated? • An application of Einstein’s equation • Matter and energy are related as follows E = M c2 • In question 3 we will use this • Take mass of original star • Subtract mass of end product • Subtract mass of expanding shell • Apply the equation to what is left over

  16. Extragalactic Supernovae Why wait? Supernovae are so bright that they can be seen in other Galaxies! Zwicky started such searches and found a total of 120. Currently 984 known. One of their uses is to study the expansion of the Universe (see ASTR 106)

  17. 0 Neutron Stars The central core will collapse into a compact object supported by neutron degeneracy pressure. A supernova explosion of an M > 8 Msun star blows away its outer layers. Pressure becomes so high that electrons and protons combine to form stable neutrons throughout the object. Typical size: R ~ 10 km Mass: M ~ 1.4 – 3 Msun Density: r ~ 1014 g/cm3  Piece of neutron star matter of the size of a sugar cube has a mass of ~ 100 million tons!!!

  18. 0 Black Holes Just like white dwarfs (Chandrasekhar limit: 1.4 Msun), there is a mass limit for neutron stars: Neutron stars can not exist with masses > 3 Msun We know of no mechanism to halt the collapse of a compact object with > 3 Msun. It will collapse forming a singularity: A BLACK HOLE!

  19. Summary • Supernova are violent stellar explosions • Type I destruction of greedy white dwarfs • Type II core collapse of massive stars • Supernovae produce exotic objects • Neutron stars • Black holes • Supernovae probe the size of the Universe • Type I supernovae act as “standard candles”

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