PCS 181 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Star Formation, Beryllium, Oxygen-Burning Process

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Strong nuclear force is strongest force in universe. 1h + 1h 2h + e+ + v (deuterium, positron, neutrino) 2h + 1h 3he + y (helium isotope, radiation burst) 3he + 3he 4he + 1h +1h (helium, hydrogen) Overall, 4 hydrogen nuclei fuse to form 1 helium nucleus and a small amount of mass is released as energy (4. 3x10-12 j) But a typical star has 1038 such reactions each second! So energy produced each second is (4. 3x10-12 j)(1x1038) 4 x 1026 w. This is luminosity (energy per second) observed for our sun (a typical star) Massive stars: greater core densities and greater core pressures. Faster rate of hydrogen fusion shorter main sequence lifetime of only a few million years. Average, normal stars (like our sun) will fuse hydrogen over a lifetime of several billion years. Massive stars only live for a few million years.

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