Stars & the Universe
Stars and the Universe - IGCSE Physics (CIE)
6.2.1 The Sun as a Star
The Sun - Our Closest Star
- Medium-sized star consisting mostly of hydrogen (≈70%) and helium (≈28%)
- Radiates most energy in infrared, visible light, and ultraviolet regions of the electromagnetic spectrum
- Surface temperature: ≈5,500°C
- Core temperature: ≈15 million °C
- Powered by nuclear fusion reactions that convert hydrogen into helium
- This fusion process releases enormous amounts of energy according to E=mc²
- The balance between gravitational collapse and outward pressure from fusion maintains stellar stability
6.2.2 Stars and Galaxies
Galaxies and Cosmic Distances
- Galaxies are massive collections of billions of stars held together by gravity
- The Sun is one star in the Milky Way galaxy
- Other stars in the Milky Way are much farther from Earth than the Sun
- Light-year (ly): distance light travels in one year in vacuum
1 light-year = 9.5 × 10¹⁵ metres
Stellar Life Cycle
Life Cycle of Stars
Less Massive Stars (like our Sun)
Interstellar Cloud
Gas & Dust
→
Protostar
Collapsing Cloud
→
Main Sequence
Stable Star
→
Red Giant
Expanding
→
Planetary Nebula + White Dwarf
Final Stage
More Massive Stars
Interstellar Cloud
Gas & Dust
→
Protostar
Collapsing Cloud
→
Main Sequence
Stable Star
→
Red Supergiant
Massive Expansion
→
Supernova
Explosion
→
Neutron Star or Black Hole
Remnant
Detailed Life Cycle Stages
- Formation: Stars form from interstellar clouds of gas and dust containing hydrogen
- Protostar: Cloud collapses under gravity, temperature increases due to compression
- Stable Star: Achieved when gravitational attraction inward equals outward pressure from high core temperature
- Fuel Depletion: All stars eventually exhaust their hydrogen fuel
- Expansion Phase:
- Less massive stars → Red Giants
- More massive stars → Red Supergiants
- End Stages:
- Red Giant → Planetary Nebula with White Dwarf at center
- Red Supergiant → Supernova explosion → Nebula with heavier elements → Neutron Star or Black Hole
- Recycling: Supernova nebulae can form new stars with planets
6.2.3 The Universe
The Cosmic Scale
- The Milky Way is one of billions of galaxies in the Universe
- Diameter of Milky Way: ≈100,000 light-years
- Redshift: Increase in observed wavelength of EM radiation from receding stars/galaxies
- Light from distant galaxies appears redshifted compared to Earth-based sources
- Redshift provides evidence for Universe expansion and supports the Big Bang Theory
Evidence for the Big Bang Theory
Key Evidence
- Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR):
- Microwave radiation observed uniformly throughout space
- Produced shortly after Universe formation
- Originally high-energy radiation, expanded into microwave region as Universe expanded
- Temperature: ≈2.7 K (-270.45°C)
- Redshift Measurements:
- Speed (v) of galaxy recession found from wavelength change due to redshift
- Distance (d) of far galaxies determined using supernova brightness
Hubble's Law and the Age of the Universe
Hubble's Law: v = H₀ × d
Hubble Constant (H₀):
- Ratio of galaxy recession speed to its distance from Earth
- Current estimate: H₀ = 2.2 × 10⁻¹⁸ per second
- Units: km/s/Mpc (kilometers per second per megaparsec)
Estimated Age of Universe: t ≈ 1/H₀
Significance: The relationship v = H₀ × d suggests all matter in the Universe was present at a single point, supporting the Big Bang Theory.
Key Relationships
- Greater redshift = faster recession = greater distance
- Hubble constant gives expansion rate of Universe
- Inverse of Hubble constant (1/H₀) estimates Universe age
- Current age estimate: ≈13.8 billion years
Key Exam Concepts
- Describe stellar life cycles for different mass stars
- Explain redshift as evidence for expanding Universe
- Apply Hubble's Law and understand its implications
- Understand the evidence supporting the Big Bang Theory
- Remember key values:
- 1 light-year = 9.5 × 10¹⁵ m
- Milky Way diameter ≈ 100,000 light-years
- Hubble constant H₀ = 2.2 × 10⁻¹⁸ s⁻¹
- Universe age ≈ 13.8 billion years