Subsequent development on the main sequence
As the central temperature and density continue to rise, the proton-proton and carbon cycles become active, and the development of the (now genuine) star is stabilized. The star then reaches the main sequence, where it remains for most of its active life. The time required for the contraction phase depends on the mass of the star. A star of the Sun’s mass generally requires tens of millions of years to reach the main sequence, whereas one of much greater mass might take a few hundred thousand years.
By the time the star reaches the main sequence, it is still chemically homogeneous. With additional time, the hydrogen fuel in the core is converted to helium, and the temperature slowly rises. If the star is sufficiently massive to have a convective core, the matter in this region has a chance to be thoroughly mixed, but the outer region does not mix with the core. The Sun, by contrast, has no convective core, and the helium-to-hydrogen ratio is maximum at the centre and decreases outward. Throughout the life of the Sun, there has been a steady depletion of hydrogen, so that the concentration of hydrogen at the centre today is probably only about one-third of the original amount. The rest has been transformed into helium. Like the rate of formation of a star, the subsequent rate of evolution on the main sequence is proportional to the mass of the star; the greater the mass, the more rapid the evolution. Whereas the Sun is destined to endure for some 10 billion years, a star of twice the Sun’s mass burns its fuel at such a rate that it lasts about 3 billion years, and a star of 10 times the Sun’s mass has a lifetime measured in tens of millions of years. By contrast, stars having a fraction of the mass of the Sun seem able to endure for trillions of years, which is much greater than the current age of the universe.
The spread of luminosities and colours of stars within the main sequence can be understood as a consequence of evolution. At the beginning of their lives as hydrogen-burning objects, stars define a nearly unique line in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram called the zero-age main sequence. Without differences in initial chemical composition or in rotational velocity, all the stars would start exactly from this unique line. As the stars evolve, they adjust to the increase in the helium-to-hydrogen ratio in their cores and gradually move away from the zero-age main sequence. When the core fuel is exhausted, the internal structure of the star changes rapidly; it quickly leaves the main sequence and moves toward the region of giants and supergiants.
As the composition of its interior changes, the star departs the main sequence slowly at first and then more rapidly. When about 10 percent of the star’s mass has been converted to helium, the structure of the star changes drastically. All of the hydrogen in the core has been burned out, and this central region is composed almost entirely of inert helium, with trace admixtures of heavier elements. The energy production now occurs in a thin shell where hydrogen is consumed and more helium added to a growing but inert core. The outer parts of the star expand outward because of the increased burning there, and as the star swells up, its luminosity gradually increases. The details of the evolutionary process depend on the metal-to-hydrogen ratio, and the course of evolution differs for stars of different population types.
Later stages of evolution
The great spread in luminosities and colours of giant, supergiant, and subgiant stars is also understood to result from evolutionary events. When a star leaves the main sequence, its future evolution is precisely determined by its mass, rate of rotation (or angular momentum), and chemical composition and whether it is a member of a close binary system. Giants and supergiants of nearly the same radius and surface temperature may have evolved from main-sequence stars of different ages and masses.
Evolution of low-mass stars
Theoretical calculations suggest that, as the star evolves from the main sequence, the hydrogen-helium core gradually increases in mass but shrinks in size as more and more helium ash is fed in through the outer hydrogen-burning shell. Energy is carried outward from the shell by rapid convection currents. The temperature of the shell rises; the star becomes more luminous; and it finally approaches the top of the giant domain on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. By contrast, the core shrinks by gravitational contraction, becoming hotter and denser until it reaches a central temperature of about 120 million K. At that temperature the previously inert helium is consumed in the production of heavier elements.
When two helium nuclei each of mass 4 atomic units (4He) are jammed together, it might be expected that they would form a nucleus of beryllium of mass 8 atomic units (8Be). In symbols, 4He + 4He → 8Be. Actually, however, 8Be is unstable and breaks down into two helium nuclei. If the temperature and density are high enough, though, the short-lived beryllium nucleus can (before it decays) capture another helium nucleus in what is essentially a three-body collision to form a nucleus of carbon-12—namely, 8Be + 4He → 12C.
This fusion of helium in the core, called the triple alpha process, can begin gradually in some stars, but in stars with masses between about half of and three times the Sun’s mass, it switches on with dramatic suddenness, a process known as the “helium flash.” Outwardly the star shows no discernible effect, but the course of its evolution is changed with this new source of energy. Having only recently become a red giant, it now evolves somewhat down and then to the left in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, becoming smaller and hotter. This stage of core helium burning, however, lasts only about a hundredth of the time taken for core hydrogen burning. It continues until the core helium supply is exhausted, after which helium fusion is limited to a shell around the core, just as was the case for hydrogen in an earlier stage. This again sets the star evolving toward the red giant stage along what is called the asymptotic giant branch, located slightly above the main region of giants in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
In more massive stars, this cycle of events can continue, with the stellar core reaching ever-higher temperatures and fusing increasingly heavy nuclei, until the star eventually experiences a supernova explosion (see below Evolution of high-mass stars). In lower-mass stars like the Sun, however, there is insufficient mass to squeeze the core to the temperatures needed for this chain of fusion processes to proceed, and eventually the outermost layers extend so far from the source of nuclear burning that they cool to a few thousand kelvins. The result is an object having two distinct parts: a well-defined core of mostly carbon ash (a white dwarf star; see below End states of stars) and a swollen spherical shell of cooler and thinner matter spread over a volume roughly the size of the solar system. Such shells of matter, called planetary nebulas, are actually observed in large numbers in the sky. Of the roughly 3,500 examples known in the Milky Way Galaxy alone, NGC 7027 is the most intensively studied.