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Glossary term: Estructura estelar

Also known as Capas internas de una estrella, estructura interna de una estrella

Description: Es la composición y organización interna de una estrella que detalla los procesos físicos que la mantienen en equilibrio, proceso que le permite a una estrella brillar. En la parte más interna, el núcleo, es dónde se producen las fusiones nucleares, lo que produce la energía en forma de luz que inicia su viaje hacia las capas siguientes.

Las siguientes capas dependen del tipo de estrella, de tal manera se pueden encontrar después del núcleo las siguientes capas: en la zona radiativa es donde la energía se transporta a través de la emisión y absorción de fotones. Posteriormente, se encuentra la zona convectiva, donde la energía se transporta a través de circulación del plasma y, por último, se encuentra la atmósfera estelar en la que se puede encontrar la fotosfera, la cromosfera y la corona solar.

Hay que hacer una revisión minuciosa de la estructura según el tipo de estrella, pues las estrellas muy masivas pueden presentar variaciones internas importantes.

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Term and definition status: The original definition of this term in English have been approved by a research astronomer and a teacher
The translation of this term and its definition is still awaiting approval

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Related Diagrams


Three stars with different onion-like layers for convection and radiation.

Stellar Structure

Caption: Stars are balls of plasma. For most of a star’s life it burns hydrogen into helium in its core. This phase of a star’s life is known as the main sequence. Burning hydrogen into helium produces heat, that heat travels out of the star’s core eventually reaching the star’s photosphere (often referred to as the “surface” of the star). From here the heat can radiate into space as various forms of electromagnetic radiation. However, how heat travels from the core to the photosphere depends on the star’s mass. Imagine a parcel of gas rising inside a star. As it rises, it moves into an area of lower pressure, so it cools down and expands. If the parcel is still hotter, and therefore less dense than its surroundings, it keeps moving upward due to buoyancy. Eventually, it will rise far enough to cool and sink back down. This rising and sinking cycle is called convection. Whether convection occurs depends on how quickly temperature changes as you move away from the star’s core. If the temperature in a star drops rapidly, rising parcels of gas are more likely to stay hotter than their surroundings, so convection dominates as the mode of energy transfer in this part of the star. Conversely if the temperature drops more slowly (i.e. if the temperature gradient is small) then heat will mostly be transferred by radiation (photons). In the most massive main sequence stars (more massive than about 1.5 times the mass of the Sun, seen here on the left), hydrogen is burned into helium using the CNO cycle. This is highly temperature dependent and thus energy production is concentrated near the center of the star. This leads to a larger temperature gradient and thus a convective core. Further out the temperature gradient becomes smaller and heat transport is dominated by radiation. This is called the radiative zone. For lower mass stars like the Sun (between 0.3 and 1.5 solar masses, seen here in the middle) hydrogen is burned to helium using a different process (the pp chain). This depends less on the internal temperature than the CNO cycle and so energy production is more distributed in the star’s core. This leads to a smaller temperature gradient and thus a radiative core where convection occurs surrounded by a radiative zone. Going further out the gas becomes cool enough for some elements to hang to on some of their electrons, i.e. not being completely ionised. This partially ionised gas is more opaque to photons, trapping heat. This leads to a large temperature gradient and thus convection. The lowest mass stars (below 0.3 solar masses, seen here on the right) have no radiative zone and are fully convective. The arrows in the radiative zone are shown as wavy lines heading out of the star. However, a photon’s journey out of a star is much more complex with each individual photon travelling only a short distance before being deflected by some of the charged particles that make up the plasma of the star’s interior. This leads to a long and winding road that takes millennia instead of the few seconds it would take if the photon did not interact with particles in the plasma.
Credit: Based on a vector diagram by Wikimedia user Д.Ильин which itself is based on a diagram from sun.org

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