PCS 181 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Red Supergiant Star, White Dwarf, Binary Star

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17 Oct 2017
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Nova occurs in binary systems where a white dwarf is pulling mass from its companion. Gentle explosion of hydrogen gas on surface of a white dwarf in a binary star system. Process does not damage the white dward and it can repeat. Mass transfer can be excessive that white dwarf cannot support the mass it gains. So the nova becomes a supernova (type 1) This results in star exploding and leaving no remnant. Stars mass determines what life path it will take. High mass giant stars (>8m) have a different story: Fusion in the core continues through many more stages than for low mass stars. Heavier elements are produced: carbon, oxygen, neon, silicon, up until iron. Supergiant has an inert iron core which collapses & heats: fe cannot fuse and release energy, it marks the end-point of nuclear fusion to give energy.

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