Stellar interiors
Models of the internal structure of stars—particularly their temperature, density, and pressure gradients below the surface—depend on basic principles explained in this section. It is especially important that model calculations take account of the change in the star’s structure with time as its hydrogen supply is gradually converted into helium. Fortunately, given that most stars can be said to be examples of an “ideal gas,” the relations between temperature, density, and pressure have a basic simplicity.
Distribution of matter
Several mathematical relations can be derived from basic physical laws, assuming that the gas is “ideal” and that a star has spherical symmetry; both these assumptions are met with a high degree of validity. Another common assumption is that the interior of a star is in hydrostatic equilibrium. This balance is often expressed as a simple relation between pressure gradient and density. A second relation expresses the continuity of mass; i.e., if M is the mass of matter within a sphere of radius r, the mass added, ΔM, when encountering an increase in distance Δr through a shell of volume 4πr2Δr, equals the volume of the shell multiplied by the density, ρ. In symbols, ΔM = 4πr2ρΔr.
A third relation, termed the equation of state, expresses an explicit relation between the temperature, density, and pressure of a star’s internal matter. Throughout the star the matter is entirely gaseous, and, except in certain highly evolved objects, it obeys closely the perfect gas law. In such neutral gases the molecular weight is 2 for molecular hydrogen, 4 for helium, 56 for iron, and so on. In the interior of a typical star, however, the high temperatures and densities virtually guarantee that nearly all the matter is completely ionized; the gas is said to be a plasma, the fourth state of matter. Under these conditions not only are the hydrogen molecules dissociated into individual atoms, but also the atoms themselves are broken apart (ionized) into their constituent protons and electrons. Hence, the molecular weight of ionized hydrogen is the average mass of a proton and an electron—namely, 1/2 on the atom-mass scale noted above. By contrast, a completely ionized helium atom contributes a mass of 4 with a helium nucleus (alpha particle) plus two electrons of negligible mass; hence, its average molecular weight is 4/3. As another example, a totally ionized nickel atom contributes a nucleus of mass 58.7 plus 28 electrons; its molecular weight is then 58.7/29 = 2.02. Since stars contain a preponderance of hydrogen and helium that are completely ionized throughout the interior, the average particle mass, μ, is the (unit) mass of a proton, divided by a factor taking into account the concentrations by weight of hydrogen, helium, and heavier ions. Accordingly, the molecular weight depends critically on the star’s chemical composition, particularly on the ratio of helium to hydrogen as well as on the total content of heavier matter.
If the temperature is sufficiently high, the radiation pressure, Pr, must be taken into account in addition to the perfect gas pressure, Pg. The total equation of state then becomes P = Pg + Pr. Here Pg depends on temperature, density, and molecular weight, whereas Pr depends on temperature and on the radiation density constant, a = 7.5 × 10−15 ergs per cubic cm per degree to the fourth power. With μ = 2 (as an upper limit) and ρ = 1.4 grams per cubic cm (the mean density of the Sun), the temperature at which the radiation pressure would equal the gas pressure can be calculated. The answer is 28 million K, much hotter than the core of the Sun. Consequently, radiation pressure may be neglected for the Sun, but it cannot be ignored for hotter, more massive stars. Radiation pressure may then set an upper limit to stellar luminosity.
Certain stars, notably white dwarfs, do not obey the perfect gas law. Instead, the pressure is almost entirely contributed by the electrons, which are said to be particulate members of a degenerate gas (see below White dwarfs). If μ′ is the average mass per free electron of the totally ionized gas, the pressure, P, and density, ρ, are such that P is proportional to a 5/3 power of the density divided by the average mass per free electron; i.e., P = 1013(ρ/μ′)5/3. The temperature does not enter at all. At still higher densities the equation of state becomes more intricate, but it can be shown that even this complicated equation of state is adequate to calculate the internal structure of the white dwarf stars. As a result, white dwarfs are probably better understood than most other celestial objects.
For normal stars such as the Sun, the energy-transport method for the interior must be known. Except in white dwarfs or in the dense cores of evolved stars, thermal conduction is unimportant because the heat conductivity is very low. One significant mode of transport is an actual flow of radiation outward through the star. Starting as gamma rays near the core, the radiation is gradually “softened” (becomes longer in wavelength) as it works its way to the surface (typically, in the Sun, over the course of about a million years) to emerge as ordinary light and heat. The rate of flow of radiation is proportional to the thermal gradient—namely, the rate of change of temperature with interior distance. Providing yet another relation of stellar structure, this equation uses the following important quantities: a, the radiation constant noted above; c, the velocity of light; ρ, the density; and κ, a measure of the opacity of the matter. The larger the value of κ, the lower the transparency of the material and the steeper the temperature fall required to push the energy outward at the required rate. The opacity, κ, can be calculated for any temperature, density, and chemical composition and is found to depend in a complex manner largely on the two former quantities.
In the Sun’s outermost (though still interior) layers and especially in certain giant stars, energy transport takes place by quite another mechanism: large-scale mass motions of gases—namely, convection. Huge volumes of gas deep within the star become heated, rise to higher layers, and mix with their surroundings, thus releasing great quantities of energy. The extraordinarily complex flow patterns cannot be followed in detail, but when convection occurs, a relatively simple mathematical relation connects density and pressure. Wherever convection does occur, it moves energy much more efficiently than radiative transport.