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Origin of Carbon

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July 11, 2020

Why in news?

A study on ‘white dwarfs’ has provided new insights on the origins of the carbon in the Milky Way galaxy.

What are white dwarfs?

  • White dwarfs are the dense remnants of a star after its death, whose nuclear energy supplies have been used up.
  • They consist of degenerate matter with a very high density due to gravitational effects.

What is the importance of carbon?

  • Carbon is essential for life.
  • It is the simple building block of all the complex organic molecules that organisms need.
  • It is known that all the carbon in the Milky Way came from dying stars that ejected the element into their surroundings.
  • However, there is a debate on what kind of stars made the major contribution.

How does carbon come from stars?

  • Most stars, except the most massive ones, turn into white dwarfs.
  • When the massive ones die, they go with a spectacular bang known as the supernova.
  • Both low mass and massive stars eject their ashes into the surroundings before they end their lives.
  • These ashes contain different chemical elements, including carbon.

How carbon is released?

  • In both the type of stars, carbon is synthesised in its deep and hot interiors through the triple-alpha reaction.
  • [Triple-alpha reaction = Fusion of three helium nuclei]
  • In low-mass stars, the newly synthesised carbon is transported to the surface from the interiors via gigantic bubbles of gas.
  • From the surface, the carbon is injected into the cosmos through stellar winds.
  • Massive stars enrich the interstellar medium with carbon before the supernova explosion, when they also experience powerful stellar winds.

What did the study find?

  • In 2018, the researchers analysed a few white dwarfs belonging to open star clusters of the Milky Way.
  • They measured the masses of the white dwarfs, derived their masses at birth, and from there calculated the “initial-final mass relation”.
  • [Initial-final mass relation is a key astrophysical measure that integrates information of the entire life cycles of stars.]
  • They found that the more massive the star at birth, the more massive the white dwarf left at its death.
  • So far, stars born roughly 1.5 billion of years ago in our galaxy were thought to have produced white dwarfs about 60-65% the mass of Sun.
  • Instead, they were found to have died leaving behind more massive compact remnants, about 70-75% solar masses.

What explains this?

  • The stripping of carbon-rich outer mantle of these stars occurred slowly.
  • This is slow enough to allow the central cores of these stars, the future white dwarfs, to grow considerably in mass.
  • By analysing the initial-final mass relation, the size range for the stars that contributed carbon to the Milky Way was concluded.
  • Stars more massive than 2 solar masses contributed to the galactic enrichment of carbon.
  • Stars less massive than 1.65 solar masses did not spread its carbon-rich ashes upon death.
  • Having fixed the minimum initial mass for the production of carbon in low-mass stars is great, since it helps putting the pieces together.

 

Source: The Indian Express

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