DB said:
Hey cepheid, I have read that all stars start out fusing just hydrogen and helium, and that massive stars reach the "heavy metals" fusion, while main sequence stars end at around calcium. (all once the hydrogen has run out) So would that mean that the difference between spectral class star formation is mass and density of H-He?, and not the more material at the beginning of stellar evolution?
Thanks
Yes, all reactions are, at first, H to He in stars initially made of just H and He. But, the Main Sequence
ends at H burning. When temperatures are ~100 million K, the He can fuse (mostly to C) and
the star leaves the main sequence. In "average mass stars, the H burns mostly by the Proton-Proton Chain process;
http://fusedweb.pppl.gov/CPEP/Chart_Pages/2.TwoFusionReactions.html
In more massive stars, the H burns predominately by the CNO cycle if even small amounts of these "metals are present;
http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/lect/energy/cno.html
The He can burn only by the Triple-Alpha Process;
http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/lect/energy/triplealph.html
Integral said:
The more material (H, He what ever the ratio) that is present in the initial cloud the greater the mass the hotter the star. Because 25% (I will use your numbers) of the mass is He does not mean that 25% of the reactions will be He + He.
True. In fact, none of the He will fuse below ~100 million K as mentioned above, regardless of the H to He ratio in the initial protostar.
Integral said:
The color of a star is determined by the amount of energy being generated by the fusion process. The more mass that is present, the more atoms that are fusing and therefore more energy is released and the star is hotter. In addition more mass means more gravitational force to drive the fusion reaction so when a large mass of H is involved in the formation of a star it will burn hotter and faster. Once the point has been reached that the main reaction occurring is the He + He -> C the star will no longer be producing sufficient energy to balance the force of gravity. This leads to a collapse and a nova event.
This paragraph is true except for the last sentence. When the H burning stops in a core, the star will still burn H in a shell around the He core and if the mass is greater than about 0.5 solar masses there will be enough gravity to compress the core (raising temperature) to where the He starts fusion. This starts as a rapid "Helium Flash" and some outer layers of the star's material is ejected. The He burning will (can) stabilize but the star will soon start to expand to the giant stages, not yet a collapse or nova event.
DB said:
Yes, and all initially fuse hydrogen and helium no matter what class right?
Right. For a fairly good "timeline" of these processes, go to:
http://www.astronomynotes.com/evolutn/s2.htm and keep clicking the "next" until the end. Another one just as good is found at:
http://nrumiano.free.fr/Estars/birth.html . Again, just follow the progression at the bottom of each page.