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The most important questions to study for the exam are highlighted.
1. A low-mass star expands and cools, becoming more luminous as it evolves from the
main-sequence to the giant phase. In which direction will the star's position move on the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram?
Horizontally, to the left, along the horizontal branch
Up and to the right
Up and to the left, along the main sequence
Cooling moves the star to the right, while increased luminosity moves it upward.
2. Both red giant stars and asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars are red and very large.
Which statement below CORRECTLY describes the fundamental difference between
them?
Red giants are undergoing core helium fusion, while AGB stars are undergoing
helium-shell fusion.
They are in similar stages of their evolution, but red giants are low-mass stars,
while AGB stars are high-mass stars.
Red giants are undergoing hydrogen-shell fusion, while AGB stars are
undergoing both hydrogen- and helium-shell fusion.
Red giants go on to ignite core helium fusion and become horizontal branch stars; then
after core helium fusion ends and a helium shell is ignited (with hydrogen shell fusion
around it), they become AGB stars.
3. When a star ascends the red giant branch for the second time, it will have
a quiescent core of helium and hydrogen fusion reactions occurring in a shell
around this core.
a quiescent core of carbon and oxygen and hydrogen and helium fusion
reactions occurring in shells around this core.
no fusion reactions going on anywhere in the star because it has used up its
nuclear fuel.
The hydrogen and helium originally in the core have been converted to carbon and
oxygen, and gravitational energy has compressed the region outside the core and
increased its temperature to the point where hydrogen and helium reactions can occur in
shells surrounding the core.
4. In the entire lifetime of a low-mass star, how many kinds of thermonuclear reactions
occur?
Twohydrogen and helium fusion
Onehydrogen fusion to produce helium
Manyhydrogen, helium, carbon, oxygen, and heavier element fusion to make
even heavier nuclei
The internal temperature in a low-mass star does not become great enough for fusion
reactions to begin in the carbon and oxygen that result from helium fusion, so helium is
the heaviest element that undergoes fusion.
5. Why do carbon fusion reactions never occur in the core of a low-mass star?
The star explodes before carbon fusion can begin.
The core never becomes hot enough.
The required carbon is never produced in the core.
Electron degeneracy carbon-oxygen core pressure prevents the core from becoming hot
enough to start either carbon or oxygen fusion.
6. What happens after the asymptotic giant branch stage of a star's life?
The star contracts relatively rapidly toward the main sequence.
Helium fusion ends in the core, and fusion of both hydrogen and helium begins in
shells around the core.
Matter is ejected into space to form a planetary nebula.
Shell helium flashes become strong enough to drive the matter off the star's surface,
leaving behind a hot core that then forms a white dwarf.
This happens at the end of the life of a low-mass star like the Sun and is a slow
expansion, not a violent explosion.
8. A planetary nebula appears as a glowing shell or cloud around a very hot white dwarf
star. What are the physics and dynamics of this radiating region?
The "shell" is simply the region of interstellar medium surrounding the star. The
ultraviolet radiation from the star induces emission of atomic line radiation in the
gas.
The shell is the original outer layers of the star being pushed into space. The
intense ultraviolet radiation from the remaining core of this star ionizes the gas,
exciting atoms to emit atomic line radiation.
The shell is interstellar gas and dust that are slowly condensing onto the hot star.
The ultraviolet radiation from the star is exciting the gas to emit visible radiation.
The outer layers of the star are pushed off the star by radiation pressure and make up the
shell of the planetary nebula. This process represents a late phase in the evolution of a
low-mass star.
The planetary nebula shell expands slowly away from its source of excitation, the white
dwarf star, and eventually ceases to emit light.
The envelope is pushed off quite smoothly (not explosively), producing a planetary
nebula around a white dwarf star.
Electron degeneracy prevents further reduction in size, but energy loss through radiation
cools it, leading to decreased luminosity.
12. Which of the following household items is the closest analogy to a white dwarf star?
A sodium vapor streetlight
An incandescent light bulb
A hot metal bar
The metal bar has no internal energy source and its "luminosity" and temperature are
falling steadily.
A white dwarf cannot be more massive than about 1.4 solar masses, or it will collapse.
If the mass of a star, or even the electron-degenerate core of a more massive star, exceeds
the Chandrasekhar limit, then electron degeneracy cannot prevent core collapse. The star
then proceeds to the supernova stage (immediately, for a white dwarf, or after some
intervening stages for a more massive star).
15. When a nova occurs, we see a star suddenly brighten dramatically and then fade
again. What causes this to happen?
A white dwarf is destroyed by a cataclysmic explosion after mass is transferred to
it from a companion in a binary star system.
The outermost layer of a white dwarf is blasted into space by nuclear reactions,
without harming the white dwarf itself.
Mass is blasted into space from the surface of a neutron star after being
transferred there from a companion in a binary star system.
The exploding layer consists of material that was transferred to the white dwarf from a
companion in a binary star system. The explosion occurs only in the outermost layer and
leaves the white dwarf intact.
16. As intermediate- and high-mass stars evolve, their cores undergo stages of nuclear
fusion reactions involving successively heavier and heavier elements (helium, carbon,
oxygen, silicon). How do the lifetimes of these stages compare to each other?
The lifetimes become longer as the nuclei become heavier.
The lifetimes are approximately the same for all stages of nuclear fusion.
The lifetimes become shorter as the nuclei become heavier.
Because of core contraction, each stage occurs at a higher temperature than the previous
stage, and therefore the fusion occurs more rapidly. Also, the number of nuclei available
to react is smaller, which further reduces the lifetime of the stage.
17. When do core oxygen fusion reactions occur in the evolution of a massive star?
After carbon fusion and before silicon fusion
After silicon fusion
After helium fusion and before carbon fusion
Oxygen nuclei are heavier than carbon nuclei and have a higher charge. Therefore, they
require a higher temperature to react. Because the core heats up over time, the carbon will
react first (at a lower core temperature) and the oxygen will react later, when the core
temperature is higher.
18. For which of the following atomic species can energy generation NOT occur by
nuclear fusion?
Carbon, C
Iron, Fe
Silicon, Si
Iron nuclei do not produce energy when they fuse together. In fact, they need extra
energy to do so.
19. During a supernova explosion involving a high-mass star, what happens to the iron in
the core of the star?
The iron nuclei are broken up by high-energy photons into their individual
protons and neutrons (photodisintegration).
Iron is inert and does not react, so it remains as a dense iron core after the
explosion.
The iron is thrown out into space, enriching the interstellar medium.
The temperature reaches about 5 billion K during the core collapse that initiates the
supernova explosion, and at this temperature the gamma-ray photons are energetic
enough to photodisintegrate the iron nuclei into protons and neutrons.
Iron does not react to produce heavier elements by fusion, so the amount of iron
continues to increase until instability occurs.