A giantstarhas a substantially largerradiusandluminositythan amain-sequence(ordwarf) star of the samesurface temperature.[1]They lie above the main sequence (luminosity classVin theYerkes spectral classification) on theHertzsprung–Russell diagramand correspond to luminosity classesIIandIII.[2]The termsgiantanddwarfwere coined for stars of quite different luminosity despite similar temperature orspectral type(namely K and M) byEjnar Hertzsprungin 1905[3]or 1906.[4]
Giant stars have radii up to a few hundred times theSunand luminosities between 10 and a few thousand times that of theSun.Stars still more luminous than giants are referred to assupergiantsandhypergiants.
A hot, luminous main-sequence star may also be referred to as a giant, but any main-sequence star is properly called a dwarf, regardless of how large and luminous it is.[5]
Formation
editA star becomes a giant after all thehydrogenavailable forfusionat its core has been depleted and, as a result, leaves themain sequence.[2]The behaviour of apost-main-sequence stardepends largely on its mass.
Intermediate-mass stars
editFor a star with a mass above about 0.25solar masses(M☉), once the core is depleted ofhydrogenit contracts and heats up so that hydrogen starts tofusein a shell around the core. The portion of the star outside the shell expands and cools, but with only a small increase in luminosity, and the star becomes asubgiant.The inertheliumcore continues to grow and increase in temperature as it accretes helium from the shell, but in stars up to about 10-12M☉it does not become hot enough to start helium burning (higher-mass stars are supergiants and evolve differently). Instead, after just a few million years the core reaches theSchönberg–Chandrasekhar limit,rapidly collapses, and may become degenerate. This causes the outer layers to expand even further and generates a strong convective zone that brings heavy elements to the surface in a process called the firstdredge-up.This strong convection also increases the transport of energy to the surface, the luminosity increases dramatically, and the star moves onto thered-giant branchwhere it will stably burn hydrogen in a shell for a substantial fraction of its entire life (roughly 10% for a Sun-like star). The core continues to gain mass, contract, and increase in temperature, whereas there is some mass loss in the outer layers.[6],§ 5.9.
If the star's mass, when on the main sequence, was below approximately 0.4M☉,it will never reach the central temperatures necessary to fusehelium.[7],p. 169.It will therefore remain a hydrogen-fusing red giant until it runs out of hydrogen, at which point it will become a heliumwhite dwarf.[6],§ 4.1, 6.1.According to stellar evolution theory, no star of such low mass can have evolved to that stage within the age of the Universe.
In stars above about 0.4M☉the core temperature eventually reaches 108K and helium will begin to fuse tocarbonandoxygenin the core by thetriple-alpha process.[6],§ 5.9, chapter 6.When the core is degenerate helium fusionbegins explosively,but most of the energy goes into lifting the degeneracy and the core becomes convective. The energy generated by helium fusion reduces the pressure in the surrounding hydrogen-burning shell, which reduces its energy-generation rate. The overall luminosity of the star decreases, its outer envelope contracts again, and the star moves from the red-giant branch to thehorizontal branch.[6][8],chapter 6.
When the core helium is exhausted, a star with up to about 8M☉has a carbon–oxygen core that becomes degenerate and starts helium burning in a shell. As with the earlier collapse of the helium core, this starts convection in the outer layers, triggers a second dredge-up, and causes a dramatic increase in size and luminosity. This is theasymptotic giant branch(AGB) analogous to the red-giant branch but more luminous, with a hydrogen-burning shell contributing most of the energy. Stars only remain on the AGB for around a million years, becoming increasingly unstable until they exhaust their fuel, go through a planetary nebula phase, and then become a carbon–oxygen white dwarf.[6],§ 7.1–7.4.
High-mass stars
editMain-sequence stars with masses above about 12M☉are already very luminous and they move horizontally across the HR diagram when they leave the main sequence, briefly becoming blue giants before they expand further into blue supergiants. They start core-helium burning before the core becomes degenerate and develop smoothly into red supergiants without a strong increase in luminosity. At this stage they have comparable luminosities to bright AGB stars although they have much higher masses, but will further increase in luminosity as they burn heavier elements and eventually become a supernova.
Stars in the 8~12M☉range have somewhat intermediate properties and have been called super-AGB stars.[9]They largely follow the tracks of lighter stars through RGB, HB, and AGB phases, but are massive enough to initiate core carbon burning and even some neon burning. They form oxygen–magnesium–neon cores, which may collapse in an electron-capture supernova, or they may leave behind an oxygen–neon white dwarf.
O class main sequence stars are already highly luminous. The giant phase for such stars is a brief phase of slightly increased size and luminosity before developing a supergiant spectral luminosity class. Type O giants may be more than a hundred thousand times as luminous as the sun, brighter than many supergiants. Classification is complex and difficult with small differences between luminosity classes and a continuous range of intermediate forms. The most massive stars develop giant or supergiant spectral features while still burning hydrogen in their cores, due to mixing of heavy elements to the surface and high luminosity which produces a powerful stellar wind and causes the star's atmosphere to expand.
Low-mass stars
editA star whose initial mass is less than approximately 0.25M☉will not become a giant star at all. For most of their lifetimes, such stars have their interior thoroughly mixed byconvectionand so they can continue fusing hydrogen for a time in excess of1012years, much longer than the current age of theUniverse.They steadily become hotter and more luminous throughout this time. Eventually they do develop a radiative core, subsequently exhausting hydrogen in the core and burning hydrogen in a shell surrounding the core. (Stars with a mass in excess of 0.16M☉may expand at this point, but will never become very large.) Shortly thereafter, the star's supply of hydrogen will be completely exhausted and it is expected to become aheliumwhite dwarf,[10]although the universe is too young for any such star to exist yet, so no star with that history has ever been observed.
Subclasses
editThere are a wide range of giant-class stars and several subdivisions are commonly used to identify smaller groups of stars.
Subgiants
editSubgiants are an entirely separate spectroscopic luminosity class (IV) from giants, but share many features with them. Although some subgiants are simply over-luminous main-sequence stars due to chemical variation or age, others are a distinct evolutionary track towards true giants.
Examples:
- Gamma Geminorum(γ Gem), an A-type subgiant;
- Eta Bootis(η Boo), a G-type subgiant.
- Delta Scorpii(δ Sco), a B-type subgiant.
Bright giants
editBright giantsarestarsof luminosity classIIin theYerkes spectral classification.These are stars which straddle the boundary between ordinary giants andsupergiants,based on the appearance of their spectra.[11]The bright giant luminosity class was first defined in 1943.[12]
Well known stars which are classified as bright giants include:
- Canopus
- Albireo
- Epsilon Canis Majoris
- Theta Scorpii
- Beta Draconis
- Alpha Herculis
- Gamma Canis Majoris
Red giants
editWithin any giant luminosity class, the cooler stars of spectral class K, M, S, and C, (and sometimes some G-type stars[13]) are called red giants. Red giants include stars in a number of distinct evolutionary phases of their lives: a mainred-giant branch(RGB); a redhorizontal branchorred clump;theasymptotic giant branch(AGB), although AGB stars are often large enough and luminous enough to get classified as supergiants; and sometimes other large cool stars such as immediatepost-AGB stars.The RGB stars are by far the most common type of giant star due to their moderate mass, relatively long stable lives, and luminosity. They are the most obvious grouping of stars after the main sequence on most HR diagrams, although white dwarfs are more numerous but far less luminous.
Examples:
- Pollux,a K-type giant.
- Epsilon Ophiuchi,a G-type red giant.[13]
- Arcturus(α Boötis), a K-type giant.
- R Doradus,a M-type giant.
- Mira(ο Ceti), an M-type giant and prototype Mira variable.
- Aldebaran,a K-type giant
Yellow giants
editGiant stars with intermediate temperatures (spectral class G, F, and at least some A) are called yellow giants. They are far less numerous than red giants, partly because they only form from stars with somewhat higher masses, and partly because they spend less time in that phase of their lives. However, they include a number of important classes of variable stars. High-luminosity yellow stars are generally unstable, leading to theinstability stripon the HR diagram where the majority of stars are pulsating variables. The instability strip reaches from the main sequence up to hypergiant luminosities, but at the luminosities of giants there are several classes of pulsating variable stars:
- RR Lyrae variables,pulsating horizontal-branch class A (sometimes F) stars with periods less than a day and amplitudes of a magnitude of less;
- W Virginis variables,more-luminous pulsating variables also known as type II Cepheids, with periods of 10–20 days;
- Type I Cepheid variables,more luminous still and mostly supergiants, with even longer periods;
- Delta Scuti variables,includes subgiant and main-sequence stars.
Yellow giants may be moderate-mass stars evolving for the first time towards the red-giant branch, or they may be more evolved stars on the horizontal branch. Evolution towards the red-giant branch for the first time is very rapid, whereas stars can spend much longer on the horizontal branch. Horizontal-branch stars, with more heavy elements and lower mass, are more unstable.
Examples:
- Sigma Octantis(σ Octantis), an F-type giant and a Delta Scuti variable;
- Capella Aa(α Aurigae Aa), a G-type giant.
- Beta Corvi(β Corvi), a G-type bright giant.
Blue (and sometimes white) giants
editThe hottest giants, of spectral classes O, B, and sometimes early A, are calledblue giants.Sometimes A- and late-B-type stars may be referred to as white giants.[why?]
The blue giants are a very heterogeneous grouping, ranging from high-mass, high-luminosity stars just leaving the main sequence to low-mass,horizontal-branch stars.Higher-mass stars leave the main sequence to become blue giants, then bright blue giants, and then blue supergiants, before expanding into red supergiants, although at the very highest masses the giant stage is so brief and narrow that it can hardly be distinguished from a blue supergiant.
Lower-mass, core-helium-burning stars evolve from red giants along the horizontal branch and then back again to theasymptotic giant branch,and depending on mass andmetallicitythey can become blue giants. It is thought that somepost-AGB starsexperiencing a latethermal pulsecan become peculiar[clarification needed]blue giants.
Examples:
See also
editReferences
edit- ^Patrick Moore, ed. (2002). "Giant star".Astronomy Encyclopedia.New York: Oxford University Press.ISBN0-19-521833-7.
- ^abJohn Daintith and William Gould, ed. (2006).giant(5th ed.). New York: Facts On File, Inc.ISBN0-8160-5998-5.
- ^Russell, Henry Norris (1914). "Relations Between the Spectra and Other Characteristics of the Stars".Popular Astronomy.22:275–294.Bibcode:1914PA.....22..275R.
- ^Brown, Laurie M.;Pais, Abraham;Pippard, A.B.,eds. (1995).Twentieth Century Physics.Bristol,UK; New York, NY:Institute of Physics,American Institute of Physics.p. 1696.ISBN0-7503-0310-7.OCLC33102501.
- ^Jacqueline Mitton,ed. (2001).Giant star.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.ISBN0-521-80045-5.
- ^abcdeMaurizio Salaris and Santi Cassisi (2005).Evolution of Stars and Stellar Populations.Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.ISBN0-470-09219-X.
- ^S. O. Keplerand P. A. Bradley (1995)."Structure and Evolution of White Dwarfs".Baltic Astronomy.4(2): 166–220.Bibcode:1995BaltA...4..166K.doi:10.1515/astro-1995-0213.
- ^Robin Ciardullo."Giants and Post-Giants"(PDF)(class notes). Astronomy 534,Penn State University.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2011-07-20.
- ^Eldridge, J.J.; Tout, C.A. (2004). "Exploring the divisions and overlap between AGB and super-AGB stars and supernovae".Memorie della Società Astronomica Italiana.75:694.arXiv:astro-ph/0409583.Bibcode:2004MmSAI..75..694E.
- ^Laughlin, Gregory; Bodenheimer, Peter; Adams, Fred C. (10 June 1997)."The end of the main sequence".The Astrophysical Journal.482(1): 420–432.Bibcode:1997ApJ...482..420L.doi:10.1086/304125.
- ^Abt, Helmut A. (1957)."Line Broadening in High-Luminosity Stars. I. Bright Giants".Astrophysical Journal.126:503.Bibcode:1957ApJ...126..503A.doi:10.1086/146423.
- ^Steven J. Dick (2019).Classifying the Cosmos: How We Can Make Sense of the Celestial Landscape.Springer. p. 176.ISBN9783030103804.
- ^abMazumdar, A.; et al. (August 2009), "Asteroseismology and interferometry of the red giant star ɛ Ophiuchi",Astronomy and Astrophysics,503(2): 521–531,arXiv:0906.3386,Bibcode:2009A&A...503..521M,doi:10.1051/0004-6361/200912351,S2CID15699426
External links
edit- Interactivegiant-star comparison.