Massive Stars
Evolution of Massive Stars

- Lifetimes ===> t ~ 10 [M/M(sun)]**(-3) billion years
===> for a 10 M(sun) star, t ~ 10 million years (or so)
-
Schematic evolutionary track for a massive star of say 8 or 9 times the
mass of the Sun.
Illustrative numbers for the evolution of a 25 M(sun)
star.
- Comments on the evolutionary track above
- While on the Main Sequence the star generates energy in its core
through hydrogen burning using the
CNO cycle.
While on the Main Sequence, since the chemical make-up of its core
changes, the star evolves slowly. The star's L
increases while its surface T decreases (the star moves to the right and up
in the HR diagram).
- When the core is cleaned out of hydrogen, it starts to cool and
thus starts to contract slowly. As the core contracts, it heats up and
increases in density. The slow contraction of the core causes the
overall star to become hotter and slightly more luminous (the star moves to
the left and up in the HR diagram).
- Next, the region which is just outside of the core gets
heated by the shrinking core. Since the region just outside of the core
has abundant hydrogen, when its temperature reaches several million Kelvins,
hydrogen burning is ignited in a
shell which
surrounds the core. The formation of this so-called shell source
causes the star to expand and cool (the star moves to the right in the
HR diagram).
- At this point, the energy transport in the star is by photons. However,
as the star expands and cools, convection eventually becomes more efficient
than the photon transport of energy. At around a surface temperature of a
few thousand Kelvins, convection takes over and the energy leaks out very
quickly and the luminosity of the star shoots way up (the star rises almost
vertically in the HR diagram). The star is now a Red Giant.
- Note that at this time the core is still inert (a slowly contracting
ball of helium). When the core finally reaches a temperature of
~ 100,000,000 Kelvins or so, helium burning is
ignited. This occurs at the tip of the Red Giant branch.
The helium burns in what is known as the
Triple Alpha Process.
An alpha particle is a helium nucleus. The origin of this name
is historical in nature.
- This causes the star to decrease in luminosity and to heat (causing the
star to move down and to the left in the HR diagram). The star settles into
this burning stage for a time which is roughly 10 - 20 % as long as its
Main Sequence lifetime.
- The star merrily cruises along in this state (helium burning in its core,
surrounded by a hydrogen burning shell) until it scours the
helium out of its core. The core of the star then cools, and starts to contract
in an attempt to replace the heat lost by radiation from its surface. (This
causes the star to start moving to the right in the HR diagram again).
- Now, just as before when the contracting core heated the surrounding
region and caused the ignition of hydrogen in a shell, the contracting core
heats the surrounding helium and ignites
helium burning in a shell. The star moves again rapidly to the right
in the HR diagram.
- When the conditions become right for convection to set in, the star
rapidly increases in L (and moves almost vertically in the HR diagram).
It ascends what is referred to as the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB).
- It moves up the AGB until the core contracts enough to raise its
temperature to the carbon ignition point at the tip of the AGB. When it
ignites carbon, the star stops moving upward. Note--the lifetime of
the carbon burning state is ~ 170 years. This is too fast for the star
to make any appreciable changes in its overall structure and so the outward
appearance of the star does not change during carbon burning.
- When the carbon is scoured out of the core, the core contracts until it
can start carbon burning in a shell around the core and neon
burning in the core. The neon burning lasts ~ 1 year and so the outward
appearance of the star does not change during this phase of evolution.
- For stars around 10 M(Sun), the process stops around this time.
For more massive stars, the nuclear game continues to oxygen
burning to silicon burning with the total time required for these
phases being less than 1 year and so outward evolution of the star
is not be visible for these stages.
- After silicon burning, the star has an
iron (Fe) core surrounded by many active shell sources.
The nuclear game stops at this point for stars of any mass.
The star runs out of nuclear energy sources and is poised for a
catastrophic event.
Mass Loss
A large uncertainty in the evolution of massive stars concerns mass loss
during the course of their evolution. Hot, massive stars and cool,
luminous stars are both sources of prodigous stellar winds; they can
lose a solar mass of material on time scale ranging from hundreds of
thousands of years to several hundred million years. These sound like
long times, but given the time required for stellar evolution, these
sorts of rates can affect the way in which stars evolve! The detailed
physics by which such winds are generated are not well-understood and
usually these effects are included in calculations in rather arbitrary
manners. They are usually included by hand.