Stars evolve because of changes in their composition (the abundance of their constituent elements) over their lifespans, first by burning hydrogen (main sequence star), then helium (red giant
star), and progressively burning higher elements. However, this does
not by itself significantly alter the abundances of elements in the
universe as the elements are contained within the star. Later in its
life, a low-mass star will slowly eject its atmosphere via stellar wind, forming a planetary nebula, while a higher–mass star will eject mass via a sudden catastrophic event called a supernova. The term supernova nucleosynthesis
is used to describe the creation of elements during the evolution and
explosion of a pre-supernova massive star (12–35 times the mass of the sun). Those massive stars are the most prolific source of new isotopes from carbon (Z = 6) to nickel (Z = 28).
The advanced sequence of burning fuels is driven by gravitational collapse and its associated heating, resulting in the subsequent burning of carbon, oxygen and silicon. However, most of the nucleosynthesis in the mass range A = 28–56 (from silicon to nickel) is actually caused by the upper layers of the star collapsing onto the core, creating a compressional shock wave rebounding outward. The shock front briefly raises temperatures by roughly 50%, thereby causing furious burning for about a second. This final burning in massive stars, called explosive nucleosynthesis or supernova nucleosynthesis, is the final epoch of stellar nucleosynthesis.
A stimulus to the development of the theory of nucleosynthesis was the discovery of variations in the abundances of elements found in the universe. The need for a physical description was already inspired by the relative abundances of isotopes of the chemical elements in the solar system. Those abundances, when plotted on a graph as a function of atomic number of the element, have a jagged sawtooth shape that varies by factors of tens of millions. This suggested a natural process that is not random. A second stimulus to understanding the processes of stellar nucleosynthesis occurred during the 20th century, when it was realized that the energy released from nuclear fusion reactions accounted for the longevity of the Sun as a source of heat and light.
The advanced sequence of burning fuels is driven by gravitational collapse and its associated heating, resulting in the subsequent burning of carbon, oxygen and silicon. However, most of the nucleosynthesis in the mass range A = 28–56 (from silicon to nickel) is actually caused by the upper layers of the star collapsing onto the core, creating a compressional shock wave rebounding outward. The shock front briefly raises temperatures by roughly 50%, thereby causing furious burning for about a second. This final burning in massive stars, called explosive nucleosynthesis or supernova nucleosynthesis, is the final epoch of stellar nucleosynthesis.
A stimulus to the development of the theory of nucleosynthesis was the discovery of variations in the abundances of elements found in the universe. The need for a physical description was already inspired by the relative abundances of isotopes of the chemical elements in the solar system. Those abundances, when plotted on a graph as a function of atomic number of the element, have a jagged sawtooth shape that varies by factors of tens of millions. This suggested a natural process that is not random. A second stimulus to understanding the processes of stellar nucleosynthesis occurred during the 20th century, when it was realized that the energy released from nuclear fusion reactions accounted for the longevity of the Sun as a source of heat and light.
History
In 1920, Arthur Eddington, on the basis of the precise measurements of atomic masses by F.W. Aston and a preliminary suggestion by Jean Perrin, proposed that stars obtained their energy from nuclear fusion of hydrogen to form helium and raised the possibility that the heavier elements are produced in stars. This was a preliminary step toward the idea of nucleosynthesis. In 1928, George Gamow derived what is now called the Gamow factor, a quantum-mechanical formula that gave the probability of bringing two nuclei sufficiently close for the strong nuclear force to overcome the Coulomb barrier. The Gamow factor was used in the decade that followed by Atkinson and Houtermans and later by Gamow himself and Edward Teller to derive the rate at which nuclear reactions would proceed at the high temperatures believed to exist in stellar interiors.
In 1939, in a paper entitled "Energy Production in Stars", Hans Bethe analyzed the different possibilities for reactions by which hydrogen is fused into helium. He defined two processes that he believed to be the sources of energy in stars. The first one, the proton–proton chain reaction, is the dominant energy source in stars with masses up to about the mass of the Sun. The second process, the carbon–nitrogen–oxygen cycle, which was also considered by Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker in 1938, is more important in more massive main-sequence stars.
These works concerned the energy generation capable of keeping stars
hot. A clear physical description of the proton–proton chain and of the
CNO cycle appears in a 1968 textbook. Bethe's two papers did not address the creation of heavier nuclei, however. That theory was begun by Fred Hoyle in 1946 with his argument that a collection of very hot nuclei would assemble thermodynamically into iron.
Hoyle followed that in 1954 with a large paper describing how advanced
fusion stages within massive stars would synthesize the elements from
carbon to iron in mass. This is the first work of stellar nucleosynthesis.
It and Hoyle's 1954 paper provided the roadmap to how the most abundant
elements on Earth had been synthesized within stars from their initial
hydrogen and helium, making clear how those abundant elements increased
their galactic abundances as the galaxy aged.
Hoyle's theory was expanded to other processes, beginning with the publication of a review paper in 1957 by Burbidge, Burbidge, Fowler and Hoyle (commonly referred to as the B2FH paper).
This review paper collected and refined earlier research into a heavily
cited picture that gave promise of accounting for the observed relative
abundances of the elements; but it did not itself enlarge Hoyle's 1954
picture for the origin of primary nuclei as much as many assumed, except
in the understanding of nucleosynthesis of those elements heavier than
iron by neutron capture. Significant improvements were made by Alastair G. W. Cameron and by Donald D. Clayton. Cameron presented his own independent approach
(following Hoyle's approach for the most part) of nucleosynthesis. He
introduced computers into time-dependent calculations of evolution of
nuclear systems. Clayton calculated the first time-dependent models of
the S-process and of the R-process, as well as of the burning of silicon into the abundant alpha-particle nuclei and iron-group elements, and discovered radiogenic chronologies for determining the age of the elements. The entire research field expanded rapidly in the 1970s.
Key reactions
The most important reactions in stellar nucleosynthesis:
- Hydrogen fusion:
- Helium fusion:
- The triple-alpha process
- The alpha process
- Fusion of heavier elements:
- Lithium burning: a process found most commonly in brown dwarfs
- Carbon-burning process
- Neon-burning process
- Oxygen-burning process
- Silicon-burning process
- Production of elements heavier than iron:
- Neutron capture:
- Proton capture:
- The Rp-process
- The P-process
- Photodisintegration
Hydrogen fusion
Hydrogen fusion (nuclear fusion of four protons to form a helium-4 nucleus) is the dominant process that generates energy in the cores of main-sequence stars. It is also called "hydrogen burning", which should not be confused with the chemical combustion of hydrogen in an oxidizing
atmosphere. There are two predominant processes by which stellar
hydrogen fusion occurs: proton-proton chain and the
carbon-nitrogen-oxygen (CNO) cycle. Ninety percent of all stars, with
the exception of white dwarfs, are fusing hydrogen by these two processes.
In the cores of lower-mass main-sequence stars such as the Sun, the dominant energy production process is the proton–proton chain reaction. This creates a helium-4 nucleus through a sequence of chain reactions that begin with the fusion of two protons to form a deuterium nucleus (one proton plus one neutron) along with an ejected positron and neutrino. In each complete fusion cycle, the proton–proton chain reaction releases about 26.2 MeV.
The proton–proton chain reaction cycle is relatively insensitive to
temperature; a 10% rise of temperature would increase energy production
by this method by 46%, hence, this hydrogen fusion process can occur in
up to a third of the star's radius and occupy half the star's mass. For
stars above 35% of the Sun's mass, the energy flux toward the surface is sufficiently low and energy transfer from the core region remains by radiative heat transfer, rather than by convective heat transfer. As a result, there is little mixing of fresh hydrogen into the core or fusion products outward.
In higher-mass stars, the dominant energy production process is the CNO cycle, which is a catalytic cycle
that uses nuclei of carbon, nitrogen and oxygen as intermediaries and
in the end produces a helium nucleus as with the proton-proton chain.
During a complete CNO cycle, 25.0 MeV of energy is released. The
difference in energy production of this cycle, compared to the
proton–proton chain reaction, is accounted for by the energy lost
through neutrino emission.
The CNO cycle is very temperature sensitive, a 10% rise of temperature
would produce a 350% rise in energy production. About 90% of the CNO
cycle energy generation occurs within the inner 15% of the star's mass,
hence it is strongly concentrated at the core. This results in such an intense outward energy flux that convective energy transfer become more important than does radiative transfer. As a result, the core region becomes a convection zone, which stirs the hydrogen fusion region and keeps it well mixed with the surrounding proton-rich region.
This core convection occurs in stars where the CNO cycle contributes
more than 20% of the total energy. As the star ages and the core
temperature increases, the region occupied by the convection zone slowly
shrinks from 20% of the mass down to the inner 8% of the mass. Our Sun produces 10% of its energy from the CNO cycle.
The type of hydrogen fusion process that dominates in a star is
determined by the temperature dependency differences between the two
reactions. The proton–proton chain reaction starts at temperatures about
4×106 K,
making it the dominant fusion mechanism in smaller stars. A
self-maintaining CNO chain requires a higher temperature of
approximately 16×106 K, but thereafter it increases more rapidly in efficiency as the temperature rises, than does the proton-proton reaction. Above approximately 17×106 K,
the CNO cycle becomes the dominant source of energy. This temperature
is achieved in the cores of main sequence stars with at least 1.3 times
the mass of the Sun. The Sun itself has a core temperature of about 15.7×106 K.
As a main sequence star ages, the core temperature will rise, resulting
in a steadily increasing contribution from its CNO cycle.
Helium fusion
Main sequence stars accumulate helium in their cores as a result of
hydrogen fusion, but the core does not become hot enough to initiate
helium fusion. Helium fusion first begins when a star leaves the red giant branch
after accumulating sufficient helium in its core to ignite it. In stars
around the mass of the sun, this begins at the tip of the red giant
branch with a helium flash from a degenerate helium core and the star moves to the horizontal branch where it burns helium in its core. More massive stars ignite helium in their cores without a flash and execute a blue loop before reaching the asymptotic giant branch.
Despite the name, stars on a blue loop from the red giant branch are
typically not blue in color, but are rather yellow giants, possibly Cepheid variables. They fuse helium until the core is largely carbon and oxygen. The most massive stars become supergiants when they leave the main sequence and quickly start helium fusion as they become red supergiants. After helium is exhausted in the core of a star, it will continue in a shell around the carbon-oxygen core.
In all cases, helium is fused to carbon via the triple-alpha
process. This can then form oxygen, neon, and heavier elements via the
alpha process. In this way, the alpha process preferentially produces
elements with even numbers of protons by the capture of helium nuclei.
Elements with odd numbers of protons are formed by other fusion
pathways.
Reaction rate
The reaction rate per volume between species A and B, having number densities nA,B is given by:
where σ(v) is the cross section at relative velocity v, and averaging is performed over all velocities.
Semi-classically, the cross section is proportional to , where is the de Broglie wavelength. Thus semi-classically the cross section is proportional to .
However, since the reaction involves quantum tunneling, there is an exponential damping at low energies that depends on Gamow factor EG, giving:
where S(E) depends on the details of the nuclear interaction.
One then integrates over all energies to get the total reaction rate, using the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution and the relation :
where is the reduced mass.
Since this integration has an exponential damping at high energies of the form and at high energies from the Gamow factor, the integral almost vanished everywhere except around the peak, called Gamow peak, at E0, where:
Thus:
The exponent can then be approximated around E0 as:
And the reaction rate is approximated as:
Values of S(E0) are typically 10-3-103 in units of keV*b, but are damped by a huge factor when involving a beta decay, due to the relation between the intermediate bound state (e.g. diproton) half-life and the beta decay half-life , as in the proton–proton chain reaction.
Note that typical core temperatures in main-sequence stars give kT of the order of keV.
Thus, the limiting reaction in the CNO cycle, proton capture by 14
7N
, has S(E0) ~ S(0) = 3.5 keV b, while the limiting reaction in the proton-proton chain reaction, the creation of deuterium from two protons, has a much lower S(E0) ~ S(0) = 4*10-22 keV b. Incidentally, since the former reaction has a much higher Gamow factor, and due to the relative abundance of elements in typical stars, the two reaction rates are equal at a temperature value that is within the core temperature ranges of main-sequence stars.
7N
, has S(E0) ~ S(0) = 3.5 keV b, while the limiting reaction in the proton-proton chain reaction, the creation of deuterium from two protons, has a much lower S(E0) ~ S(0) = 4*10-22 keV b. Incidentally, since the former reaction has a much higher Gamow factor, and due to the relative abundance of elements in typical stars, the two reaction rates are equal at a temperature value that is within the core temperature ranges of main-sequence stars.