by Ann » Fri Sep 06, 2019 6:07 am
BDanielMayfield wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 5:04 am
The recycling of gas (H & He) in supernovas is most efficient. ALL of the leftover gas that isn't used up in making heavier elements gets blasted back into the interstellar medium.
Which is why most gas in the Universe isn't recycled, because supernovas are rare.
Consider the picture at right of young bright cluster NGC 602 in nebula N90 in the Small Magellanic Cloud. It is immediately obvious that cluster NGC 602 (slightly below and right of center) contains some ~10 bright massive stars and a number of smaller stars. Yes, the number of massive stars may certainly be higher, but that's not the point. The point is that the burst of star formation that formed NGC 602 created very many more small non-supernova-worthy stars than big massive ones.
Or to put it differently: Most of the gas that went into creating cluster NGC 602 ended up inside small lightweight stars, not inside big massive stars.
A star like the Sun will give back perhaps half of its mass to the Universe when it dies. During its lifetime the Sun will cast off some 50% of its mass (or more) through the Solar wind, which will become particularly strong during the Sun's red giant phase.
But most stars in the Universe are smaller and less massive than the Sun, let alone smaller than stars massive enough to eventually go supernova, and they are the Uncle Scrooges of the Universe. Unlike Scrooge, they don't make more money or more mass as they age, but they jealously guard whatever they were born with, and the smallest ones live to be trillions of years old.
(If the Universe itself lasts that long, that is. Why am I thinking of the song "
In the year 2525, 2525"?)
The lifeblood of the Universe, the "free gas", gets locked up inside the miserly little red dwarfs.
No wonder the Universe as we know it can't live forever.
Ann
[quote=BDanielMayfield post_id=295002 time=1567746297 user_id=139536]
The recycling of gas (H & He) in supernovas is most efficient. ALL of the leftover gas that isn't used up in making heavier elements gets blasted back into the interstellar medium.
[/quote]
[float=right][img2]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/81/NGC602.jpg/1024px-NGC602.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]Cluster NGC 602 in the Small Magellanic Cloud. Source:
https://hubblesite.org/contents/media/images/2007/04/2042-Image.html?news=true[/size][/c][/float]Which is why most gas in the Universe isn't recycled, because supernovas are rare.
Consider the picture at right of young bright cluster NGC 602 in nebula N90 in the Small Magellanic Cloud. It is immediately obvious that cluster NGC 602 (slightly below and right of center) contains some ~10 bright massive stars and a number of smaller stars. Yes, the number of massive stars may certainly be higher, but that's not the point. The point is that the burst of star formation that formed NGC 602 created very many more small non-supernova-worthy stars than big massive ones.
Or to put it differently: Most of the gas that went into creating cluster NGC 602 ended up inside small lightweight stars, not inside big massive stars.
A star like the Sun will give back perhaps half of its mass to the Universe when it dies. During its lifetime the Sun will cast off some 50% of its mass (or more) through the Solar wind, which will become particularly strong during the Sun's red giant phase.
But most stars in the Universe are smaller and less massive than the Sun, let alone smaller than stars massive enough to eventually go supernova, and they are the Uncle Scrooges of the Universe. Unlike Scrooge, they don't make more money or more mass as they age, but they jealously guard whatever they were born with, and the smallest ones live to be trillions of years old.
(If the Universe itself lasts that long, that is. Why am I thinking of the song "[url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhNM2K8cmU8]In the year 2525, 2525"[/url]?)
The lifeblood of the Universe, the "free gas", gets locked up inside the miserly little red dwarfs.
No wonder the Universe as we know it can't live forever.
Ann