White Dwarf's & the Chandrasekhar Limit
- A white dwarf is the remnant of a low mass star
- At the end of the star’s life, the outer layers of the star have been ejected, leaving a core which is:
- Very hot
- Dense
- Solid
- Nuclear fusion no longer takes place and the heavier elements (usually carbon and oxygen) remain
- Instead, it radiates energy in the form of photons from previous fusion reactions
Electron Degeneracy Pressure
- Matter is compressed into a very small volume when the core of a star collapses
- The electrons in the atoms are no longer free to move between energy levels
- Electrons are forced to fill the available energy levels
- Electrons fill the lowest available energy levels first
- Usually, only excited electrons will fill the higher energy levels
- Compression of the matter in a collapsing core forces electrons into higher energy levels, not because they are in a higher energy state, but because there is nowhere else to go
- This rush of electrons to find an available space creates a pressure called electron degeneracy pressure, resulting in an outward acting force
- For a low-mass star, the outward electron degeneracy pressure balances the inward gravitational force, preventing further collapse and resulting in a stable white dwarf star
Car Park Analogy for Electron Degeneracy Pressure
The Chandrasekhar Limit
- The Chandrasekhar limit is the maximum mass of a stable white dwarf star
- This is when the mass of a core is up to 1.4 times the mass of the Sun
The Chandrasekhar limit of a white dwarf is 1.4 MSun
- If a white dwarf exceeds the Chandrasekhar limit:
- Electron degeneracy pressure no longer can prevent the collapse of the core
- Protons and electrons combine to become neutrons - this is how a neutron star forms
- A low-mass star will:
- Become a red giant and then a white dwarf
- If the core's mass is less than 1.4 MSun
- A high-mass star will:
- Become a red supergiant and then a neutron star or a black hole
- If the core's mass is greater than 1.4 MSun
Worked example
Once fusion has been exhausted in some red giant stars, it will begin to expel its outer layers until a white dwarf remains.
Which of the following could be the mass of a white dwarf?
You may take the mass of the Sun to be 2.0 × 1030 kg.
|
A |
2.5 × 1030 kg |
|
B |
3.0 × 1030 kg |
|
C |
2.0 × 1031 kg |
|
D |
2.8 × 1031 kg |
The correct answer is: A
Step 1: List the known quantities
-
- Solar mass = 2.0 × 1030 kg
Step 2: Calculate the mass of a white dwarf at the Chandrasekhar limit
-
- The Chandrasekar Limit is 1.4 solar masses
- Multiply the solar mass by the Chandrasekhar limit
1.4 × (2.0 × 1030 kg) = 2.8 × 1030 kg
Step 3: Identify the mass given in the question that is below 2.8 × 1030 kg
-
- Masses below 2.8 × 1030 kg will form stable white dwarf stars
- Masses above 2.8 × 1030 kg will not form stable white dwarf stars
- Therefore, the only mass that fits this criterion is 2.5 × 1030 kg