Stars condense from regions of
space of higher matter density, yet those regions are less dense than within a
vacuum chamber. These regions—known as
molecular clouds—consist mostly of hydrogen, with about 23 to 28 percent helium and a few percent heavier elements. One example of such a star-forming region is the
Orion Nebula. Most stars form in groups of dozens to hundreds of thousands of stars.
Massive stars in these groups may powerfully illuminate those clouds,
ionizing the hydrogen, and creating
H II regions. Such feedback effects, from star formation, may ultimately disrupt the cloud and prevent further star formation. All stars spend the majority of their existence as
main-sequence stars, fueled primarily by the nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium within their cores. However, stars of different masses have markedly different properties at various stages of their development. The ultimate fate of more massive stars differs from that of less massive stars, as do their luminosities and the impact they have on their environment. Accordingly, astronomers often group stars by their mass: •
Very low mass stars, with masses below , are fully convective and distribute
helium evenly throughout the whole star while on the main sequence. Therefore, they never undergo shell burning and never become
red giants. After exhausting their hydrogen they become
helium white dwarfs and slowly cool. •
Intermediate-mass stars, between ~ and ~, pass through evolutionary stages similar to low mass stars, but after a relatively short period on the
red-giant branch they ignite helium without a flash and spend an extended period in the
red clump before forming a degenerate carbon-oxygen core.
Star formation The formation of a star begins with gravitational instability within a molecular cloud, caused by regions of higher density—often triggered by compression of clouds by radiation from massive stars, expanding bubbles in the interstellar medium, the collision of different molecular clouds, or the
collision of galaxies (as in a
starburst galaxy). When a region reaches a sufficient density of matter to satisfy the criteria for
Jeans instability, it begins to collapse under its own gravitational force. As the cloud collapses, individual conglomerations of dense dust and gas form "
Bok globules". As a globule collapses and the density increases, the gravitational energy converts into heat and the temperature rises. When the protostellar cloud has approximately reached the stable condition of
hydrostatic equilibrium, a
protostar forms at the core. These
pre-main-sequence stars are often surrounded by a
protoplanetary disk and powered mainly by the conversion of gravitational energy. The period of gravitational contraction lasts about 10 million years for a star like the Sun, up to 100 million years for a red dwarf. Early stars of less than are called
T Tauri stars, while those with greater mass are
Herbig Ae/Be stars. These newly formed stars emit jets of gas along their axis of rotation, which may reduce the
angular momentum of the collapsing star and result in small patches of nebulosity known as
Herbig–Haro objects. These jets, in combination with radiation from nearby massive stars, may help to drive away the surrounding cloud from which the star was formed. Early in their development, T Tauri stars follow the
Hayashi track—they contract and decrease in luminosity while remaining at roughly the same temperature. Less massive T Tauri stars follow this track to the main sequence, while more massive stars turn onto the
Henyey track. Most stars are observed to be members of binary star systems, and the properties of those binaries are the result of the conditions in which they formed. A gas cloud must lose its angular momentum in order to collapse and form a star. The fragmentation of the cloud into multiple stars distributes some of that angular momentum. The primordial binaries transfer some angular momentum by gravitational interactions during close encounters with other stars in young stellar clusters. These interactions tend to split apart more widely separated (soft) binaries while causing hard binaries to become more tightly bound. This produces the separation of binaries into their two observed populations distributions.
Main sequence Stars spend about 90% of their lifetimes fusing hydrogen into helium in high-temperature-and-pressure reactions in their cores. Such stars are said to be on the main sequence and are called dwarf stars. Starting at zero-age main sequence, the proportion of helium in a star's core will steadily increase, the rate of nuclear fusion at the core will slowly increase, as will the star's temperature and luminosity. The Sun, for example, is estimated to have increased in luminosity by about 40% since it reached the main sequence 4.6 billion () years ago. or about 0.01% of its total mass over its entire lifespan. However, very massive stars can lose to each year, significantly affecting their evolution. Stars that begin with more than can lose over half their total mass while on the main sequence. for a set of stars that includes the Sun (center) (see
Classification) The time a star spends on the main sequence depends primarily on the amount of fuel it has and the rate at which it fuses it. The Sun is expected to live 10 billion () years. Massive stars consume their fuel very rapidly and are short-lived. Low mass stars consume their fuel very slowly. Stars less massive than , called
red dwarfs, are able to fuse nearly all of their mass while stars of about can only fuse about 10% of their mass. The combination of their slow fuel-consumption and relatively large usable fuel supply allows low mass stars to last about one trillion () years; the most extreme of will last for about 12 trillion years. Red dwarfs become
hotter and more luminous as they accumulate helium. When they eventually run out of hydrogen, they contract into a white dwarf and decline in temperature. Since the lifespan of such stars is greater than the current age of the universe (13.8 billion years), no stars under about are expected to have moved off the main sequence. Besides mass, the elements heavier than helium can play a significant role in the evolution of stars. Astronomers label all elements heavier than helium "metals", and call the chemical
concentration of these elements in a star, its
metallicity. A star's metallicity can influence the time the star takes to burn its fuel, and controls the formation of its magnetic fields, which affects the strength of its stellar wind. Older,
population II stars have substantially less metallicity than the younger, population I stars due to the composition of the molecular clouds from which they formed. Over time, such clouds become increasingly enriched in heavier elements as older stars die and shed portions of their
atmospheres.
Post–main sequence as seen by
ALMA. This is the first time that ALMA has observed the surface of a star and resulted in the highest-resolution image of Betelgeuse available. As stars of at least exhaust the supply of hydrogen at their core, they start to fuse hydrogen in a shell surrounding the helium core. The outer layers of the star expand and cool greatly as they transition into a
red giant. In some cases, they will fuse heavier
elements at the core or in shells around the core. As the stars expand, they throw part of their mass, enriched with those heavier elements, into the interstellar environment, to be recycled later as new stars. In about 5 billion years, when the Sun enters the helium burning phase, it will expand to a maximum radius of roughly , 250 times its present size, and lose 30% of its current mass. As the hydrogen-burning shell produces more helium, the core increases in mass and temperature. In a red giant of up to , the mass of the helium core becomes degenerate prior to
helium fusion. Finally, when the temperature increases sufficiently, core helium fusion begins explosively in what is called a
helium flash, and the star rapidly shrinks in radius, increases its surface temperature, and moves to the
horizontal branch of the HR diagram. For more massive stars, helium core fusion starts before the core becomes degenerate, and the star spends some time in the
red clump, slowly burning helium, before the outer convective envelope collapses and the star then moves to the horizontal branch. After a star has fused the helium of its core, it begins fusing helium along a shell surrounding the hot carbon core. The star then follows an evolutionary path called the
asymptotic giant branch (AGB) that parallels the other described red-giant phase, but with a higher luminosity. The more massive AGB stars may undergo a brief period of carbon fusion before the core becomes degenerate. During the AGB phase, stars undergo
thermal pulses due to instabilities in the core of the star. In these thermal pulses, the luminosity of the star
varies and matter is ejected from the star's atmosphere, ultimately forming a planetary nebula. As much as 50 to 70% of a star's mass can be ejected in this
mass loss process. Because energy transport in an AGB star is primarily by
convection, this ejected material is enriched with the fusion products
dredged up from the core. Therefore, the planetary nebula is enriched with elements like carbon and oxygen. Ultimately, the planetary nebula disperses, enriching the general interstellar medium. Therefore, future generations of stars are made of the "star stuff" from past stars.
Massive stars During their helium-burning phase, a star of more than 9 solar masses expands to form first a
blue supergiant and then a
red supergiant. Particularly massive stars (exceeding 40 solar masses, like
Alnilam, the central blue supergiant of
Orion's Belt) do not become red supergiants due to high mass loss. These may instead evolve to a
Wolf–Rayet star, characterised by spectra dominated by emission lines of elements heavier than hydrogen, which have reached the surface due to strong convection and intense mass loss, or from stripping of the outer layers. When helium is exhausted at the core of a massive star, the core contracts and the temperature and pressure rises enough to fuse
carbon (see
Carbon-burning process). This process continues, with the successive stages being fueled by
neon (see
neon-burning process),
oxygen (see
oxygen-burning process), and
silicon (see
silicon-burning process). Near the end of the star's life, fusion continues along a series of onion-layer shells within a massive star. Each shell fuses a different element, with the outermost shell fusing hydrogen; the next shell fusing helium, and so forth. The final stage occurs when a massive star begins producing iron. Since iron nuclei are more
tightly bound than any heavier nuclei, any fusion beyond iron does not produce a net release of energy. Some massive stars, particularly
luminous blue variables, are very unstable to the extent that they violently shed their mass into space in events known as
supernova impostors, becoming significantly brighter in the process.
Eta Carinae is known for having undergone a supernova impostor event, the Great Eruption, in the 19th century.
Collapse As a star's core shrinks, the intensity of radiation from that surface increases, creating such
radiation pressure on the outer shell of gas that it will push those layers away, forming a planetary nebula. If what remains after the outer atmosphere has been shed is less than roughly , it shrinks to a relatively tiny object about the size of Earth, known as a
white dwarf. White dwarfs lack the mass for further gravitational compression to take place. The
electron-degenerate matter inside a white dwarf is no longer a plasma. Eventually, white dwarfs fade into
black dwarfs over a very long period of time. , remnants of a supernova that was first observed around 1050 AD In massive stars, fusion continues until the iron core has grown so large (more than ) that it can no longer support its own mass. This core will suddenly collapse as its electrons are driven into its protons, forming neutrons,
neutrinos, and gamma rays in a burst of
electron capture and
inverse beta decay. The
shockwave formed by this sudden collapse causes the rest of the star to explode in a supernova. Supernovae become so bright that they may briefly outshine the star's entire home galaxy. When they occur within the Milky Way, supernovae have historically been observed by naked-eye observers as "new stars" where none seemingly existed before. A supernova explosion blows away the star's outer layers, leaving a
remnant such as the Crab Nebula. In a neutron star the matter is in a state known as
neutron-degenerate matter, with a more exotic form of degenerate matter,
QCD matter, possibly present in the core. The blown-off outer layers of dying stars include heavy elements, which may be recycled during the formation of new stars. These heavy elements allow the formation of rocky planets. The outflow from supernovae and the stellar wind of large stars play an important part in shaping the interstellar medium. and
Type Ia supernovae. Mass transfer leads to cases such as the
Algol paradox, where the most-evolved star in a system is the least massive. The evolution of binary star and higher-order
star systems is intensely researched since so many stars have been found to be members of binary systems. Around half of Sun-like stars, and an even higher proportion of more massive stars, form in multiple systems, and this may greatly influence such phenomena as novae and supernovae, the formation of certain types of star, and the enrichment of space with nucleosynthesis products. The influence of binary star evolution on the formation of evolved massive stars such as
luminous blue variables, Wolf–Rayet stars, and the progenitors of certain classes of
core collapse supernova is still disputed. Single massive stars may be unable to expel their outer layers fast enough to form the types and numbers of evolved stars that are observed, or to produce progenitors that would explode as the supernovae that are observed. Mass transfer through gravitational stripping in binary systems is seen by some astronomers as the solution to that problem. ==Distribution==