The Deconstruction of Falling Stars

Originally published in the Informanté newspaper on Thursday, 17 December, 2015.

“Space, “ Douglas Adams said, “is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space.” And it is. The diameter of the observable universe is estimated at 93 billion light-years, with a light-year being just under 10 trillion kilometres. This is so large (it has 26 zeroes at the end) that it is difficult to comprehend. 

Perhaps just as amazing, is the fact that of all the matter in this universe, 74% is hydrogen, the simplest element, and 24% Helium, the second least complex element. They occur in large molecular clouds across the universe, with these clouds able to stretch almost 100 light-years across and having a mass of up to 6 million times that of the sun. A mass that big has a large gravitational field, and so it is as well with these clouds. 

When these clouds collide, they start to form gravity hotspots, spot where the gravity is stronger than the surrounding area, and they begin to break up. Matter begins to collapse into these hotspots, strengthening them and increasing its gravitation pull. The density of matter at the center of these hotspots increase, and as a result, starts heating up. When there’s enough mass (about 8% the mass of the sun), the temperature can rise up to 10 million degrees Celsius, and at this temperature and in this incredibly dense cloud of matter, something new occurs. Nuclear fusion. 

Hydrogen atoms collide and ‘fuse’ together to form helium. This releases a momentous amount of energy, enough to offset the force of gravity and preventing the cloud from collapsing further inward. This energy release coincidentally also releases photons, or light particles. The cloud of gas lights up, and becomes a star.

But this process consumes the hydrogen, meaning that eventually, it will run out of fuel. Less massive clouds have less gravitational pressure, and fusion occurs more slowly, which means paradoxically that they’ll shine longer. Unfortunately, these red dwarf stars (with a mass of less half that of the sun) also don’t have the gravitational energy to continue fusion after their hydrogen runs out, and after six to twelve trillion years, they die to become white dwarfs – still quite hot, but no longer releasing massive amounts of energy. 

Stars with a mass more than half that of the sun to about ten times its mass burns through its hydrogen more quickly comparatively (from only half a million years for stars ten times as massive as the sun, to 100 million years for stars half as massive), but as more and more of the star turns into helium, the helium sinks to the core. With helium’s greater mass and density, the gravity becomes more intense, speeding up the hydrogen fusion process, and expanding it to a greater and greater area around the helium core. 

The outer layers of the star then expands as fusion moves closer to the surface, and the amount of light it emits increases massively as well, becoming a thousand to ten thousand times brighter. The star becomes a red giant. Eventually, the helium core becomes massive enough and hot enough that it reaches its next stage, helium fusion. At its core, the star fuses helium into carbon and oxygen, and this even greater energy release causes the core to expand, dissipating its outer hydrogen fusion layers, and reducing its energy output. Slowly the helium is used up in fusion, but even these stars are not large enough to induce the next stage of fusion, and they, too, die to become white dwarfs.

But when a star is more than 10 times as massive as the sun, it does not expand into a red giant, as the force of gravity continually causes nuclear fusion. Hydrogen to helium, helium to oxygen and carbon, then those into neon and sulphur – with fusion continually occurring, matter is continually used as fuel, and the star shines as a bright blue supergiant for only a hundred thousand years, until the core starts fusing into iron. This results in the gravitational force becoming so strong that the atoms can no longer stay separate, and the entire core fuses together. Lighter stars have the core fuse together into a neutron star – a single massive atom of billions and billions of neutrons. But in heavier stars the gravity overcomes even light, and the star collapses into a black hole, from which no light can escape. Either way, as a result of this gravitational collapse all fusion energy is released at once, exploding the outer layers of the star into space in what is known as a supernova. 


A supernova is so bright it is briefly brighter than an entire galaxy. The outer layers explode in a shockwave travelling at up to 10% of the speed of light. So much energy is released that nuclear fusion occurs in the shockwave – but unbounded by gravity, it happens more haphazardly that it does in the core, fusing in many different combinations. It is thus in these supernovae shockwaves that all the elements heavier than iron are formed. As they impact other hydrogen clouds, they trigger the formation of new stars – but these new stars now have heavier elements that don’t all collapse to the core, but rather orbit the core. We call them planets. And on some, these heavier elements start combining. Start self-replicating. Start the beginnings of life itself…

Carl Sagan famously said “We are all made of star stuff.” Every atom in your body, and the bodies of everyone around you, was once part of an exploding star, scattered across the cosmos. At this time of year, I cannot think of any other fact that can imprint such a profound connection between ourselves and the universe, and our loved ones, than this.

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