5.7 The short-lived massive stars
radiation diffusion equation, scaling of parameters
Required: Students must do problem 5.5 first.
Physics introduction: The diffusion of some quantity Q is given by
Q/
t=
/
x[D
Q/
x] , where the diffusion coefficient is D =1/3 v
. Here, v = root-mean-square particle velocity and the mean free path
=1/(n
), with
a collision cross section and n the density of particles that are targets for collisions. The flux of the quantity Q is F= D
Q/
x . F is independent of x when
Q/
t = 0.
The problem: In a spherically symmetric star, radiation steadily diffuses outwards through each spherical layer of the star without accumulating anywhere (except near the center, where nuclear fusion adds heat which is turned into radiation). The diffusing quantity Q now represents the radiative energy density, Q = aT4, and F = L/(4
r2) = D
Q/
r. Write down an equation for L in terms of n, T, dT/dr, and the constants c, a, and
.
Now do a one-step integration with r
R/2, kT
kT(center) = p(center)/<n> and use p(center) as derived in problem 5.5. Show that the dependence on R disappears and derive how L depends on M .
Given the solar lifetime of 1010years and that stars use only 10% of their H during their lifetimes, estimate the lifetime of a star with M = 20Mo.
The setting: Most stars, including the Sun, are found to be "main-sequence" stars. All main-sequence stars derive their energy from fusion of hydrogen into helium. The hotter and more luminous main sequence stars turn out to be more massive stars. We do not know why they obtained more mass during star formation, but there they are. Among stars whose masses can be measured (see problem 1.4), L is roughly proportional to M3. Stars with the largest masses M
102Mo have luminosities L
106Lo. If stars during their lifetimes all consume 10% of their hydrogen (see problem 5.4), the luminous stars must consume their nuclear fuel extremely rapidly compared to the Sun.
Nucleosynthesis: Massive stars are of special interest because they end their life by exploding as a supernova. Nuclear reactions during the explosion generate most of the elements. The elements that compose most of Earth and us humans, mainly carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, silicon, and iron, have all been made in such exploding stars. The oxygen we breathe was made in an exploding star. The oldest stars in our Galaxy, about 1.3x109years old, were formed before any stars had exploded, and they may be predicted to contain none of these elements. Indeed, they consist (almost) entirely of hydrogen and helium. The hydrogen and helium are left over from the Big Bang origin of the Universe.
The solution: In the diffusion equation dealing with radiation, v
c. Therefore, L = (4
r2)(c/3n
)a(dT4/dr). Since the problem asks only for proportionality, we ignore not only all factors such as 2 or
, but also factors such as c, a,
, or G. With r
R and (from problem 5.5) T
p(center)/<n>
(M2/R4)(R3/M) = M/R, we obtain L
R2 (R3/M)(M/R) 4/R = M3.
If we calibrate the relation using the Sun, then L/Lo=(M/Mo) 3. The lifetime of a star with structure similar to the Sun is proportional to the amount of nuclear fuel divided by the rate the fuel is used, thus to M/L and therefore to M-2. A star with M = 20Mo has a lifetime about 2.5x10-3 of the Sun's lifetime, or about 25 million years.
Interpretation: The derived relation is actually quite good. The observations fit reasonably to L proportional to M3.3. The one-step integration works well because all the stars on the main sequence have a similar degree of concentration.
The main simplification in our solution is the assumption that
is the same constant for all the stars. The atomic absorption of radiation is a strong function of both temperature and density. It differs significantly between stars of different mass. Within the Sun, the mean free path of an x-ray photon near the center is on the order of cm. As the radiation diffuses outward into less hot gases, the mean free path increases until it is of the order of 100 km for a visible photon near the surface .
Another structural factor ignored in the problem is convection. Where
is too high, dT/dr becomes so high that convection starts and carries the heat upward. Massive stars are convective near the center; the Sun is convective for r > 0.7Ro; and low-mass stars are entirely convective. The transport of heat by conduction is negligible in main sequence stars.
Finally, the manner of hydrogen fusion changes for the more massive stars. Carbon, nitrogen and oxygen nuclei are used as catalysts to speed up the fusion of hydrogen into helium. Because the electrostatic repulsion of these nuclei is larger, this "CNO cycle" requires higher central temperatures than exist in the Sun. Indeed, with T(center) proportional to M/R and, observationally, R proportional to M0.6, the more massive stars are hotter at the center. Because the tunneling probabilities increase very rapidly with temperature, even a small increase in central temperature, above that of the Sun, allows a much greater luminosity.
Didactics:
The physics introduction presented diffusion in a coordinate x. Strictly, we should write the diffusion equation appropriate to spherical symmetry,
Q/
t = div(Flux). In the problem, the spherical symmetry was introduced by defining F = L/(4
r2).
Problem 5.3, didactic 6) deals with the time needed for protostars of various masses to reach the main sequence. This stage is much shorter for massive stars than for the Sun. In fact, every stage of a massive star's life is much shorter than the equivalent stage in the Sun's life. At the end, the massive stars explode violently and leave behind a neutron star or a black hole.
How long does radiation take to diffuse out of the Sun? We obtain this answer directly from problem 5.3: the protostars contract at a rate given by how fast radiation can leave the star. According to Problem 5.3, the time is roughly
0 = GMo2/RoLo. The radiation now leaving the Sun started out near the center some 30 million years ago.
5.8 The most luminous stars
Thomson scattering cross section
Required: Students must do problems 5.5 and 5.7 first.
The problem: In problem 5.7 you derived the equation L = (4
r2)(c/3n
)adT4/dr. The right side, derived in terms of radiation energy density aT4, can also be expressed in terms of radiation pressure P(rad) = 1/3 aT4. Now suppose that gas pressure is much smaller than radiation pressure so that dP(rad)/dr dominates the equation for hydrostatic equilibrium. Eliminate dP(rad)/dr between the equation for L and the equation of hydrostatic equilibrium. . Eliminate
in the equation of hydrostatic equilibrium by expressing it in terms of electron density neassuming pure ionized hydrogen, and assume that electrons scatter the radiation, so that n = nein the equation for L. Set M(r) = M for the outer parts of a star, and obtain an equation for L in terms of only M,
, and constants. Evaluate this L using the Thomson scattering cross section
T = 6.6x10-29m2. Derive L/Lo in terms of M/Mo.
The setting: If one makes models of stars on the main sequence, one finds that the hotter, more massive stars involve an increasing ratio of radiation pressure to gas pressure, throughout most of the star. The gradient in radiation pressure acts outward, as does the gas pressure. If the gradient in radiation pressure becomes sufficient, it overcomes gravity and the star can no longer be in hydrostatic equilibrium. This stage is reached when L equals the "Eddington luminosity", evaluated in this problem. Stars with higher luminosity (depending on M/Mo) cannot be stable.
The solution: The equation of hydrostatic equilibrium is dP(rad)/dr = -GM
/r2. If radiation scattered by electrons supports the gas, then dP(rad)/dr = (L/4
r2)(ne
/c). Also,
= nemp. On canceling similar terms, L/Lo = 4
GMmpc/
Lo = 4.5x104M/Mo.
Interpretation: The Eddington luminosity is the maximum luminosity any static star (of pure hydrogen) can have. For stars on the main sequence with L/Lo = (M/Mo) 3.3, this limit is reached for M/Mo about 100. Indeed, no steady stars have been measured to have larger M.
Many stars with L near the Eddington luminosity are observed to have strong winds. This confirms that gravity binds the gas only weakly. For example, the star Eta Carinae has M = 150Mo, L = 6x106Lo and has a huge mass loss rate. In the 1830's it brightened to be the second brightest star in the sky. Altogether it seems to be at the edge of stability. The "Pistol" star, recently observed by Hubble Space Telescope, has an unexplained L = 107Lo. A surrounding nebula 4 light years across contains about 10Mo of gas, which was probably ejected in two eruptions 4x103 and 6x103years ago.
The Eddington luminosity applies to any radiating object. For quasars with a black hole of mass M = 109Mo, the Eddington luminosity is around 4x1013Lo. Indeed many quasars have such luminosities, far more than the luminosity of the galaxies whose centers they occupy. Quasars that exceed the Eddington luminosity cannot be static. Typically, gases from equatorial accretion disks are funneled into the powerful outflowing polar jets that help make quasars so spectacular.
Didactics:
The Eddington luminosity was derived for pure ionized hydrogen. For stars with 75% H and 25% He by mass (so that ne
/mp), L/Lo = 3.8x104M/Mo.
The coefficient 1/3 in the diffusion coefficient D of problem 5.7 was chosen to match diffusion of nearly isotropic radiation (mean free path short compared to the pressure or temperature scale height). It stands for the hemispheric average of cos2
. The same factor 1/3 appears in the radiation pressure. Indeed throughout most of the star (all except the photosphere) the radiation is very nearly isotropic.
There is a good physical reason that stars cannot involve radiation pressure much larger than gas pressure. In equilibrium, according to the Virial Theorem,
= -2K (Problem 5.3, didactic 4). Imagine the whole star expanding or contracting.
changes in proportion to 1/R. If internally P changes in proportion to
a
R-3a, where a = 5/3 for an ideal monatomic gas, then K, an integral of pressure over the volume of the star, changes in proportion to R3-3a. If a = 5/3, or more generally if a > 4/3, making R smaller makes K increase faster than
. Physically, that means the enhanced pressure will cause the star to expand again. As a result, the radius of the star will oscillate. The predicted period of oscillation is of the order of the time needed for a sound wave to cross the star. Indeed, many stars are observed to oscillate according to this prediction. However, if a = 4/3, then
and K change with R in the same manner. Therefore,
= -2K remains satisfied even as R changes. In principle, the star can be in equilibrium at any R. But if equilibrium is violated even slightly, the star will either continue to expand forever or continue to contract forever. Therefore, no stars with a = 4/3 can exist. Since radiation has a = 4/3, no star can exist supported purely by radiation. Similarly, in problem 5.6, a massive white dwarf with relativistic electrons has a = 4/3 and cannot exist.