What Sets the Masses of Stars?

The most important characteristic of star, which determines its properties and evolutionary path, is its mass at birth. Observations show that the most common birth mass is slightly smaller than the mass of the Sun, and that masses either much lower or much higher than this value are increasingly rare...

schedule Date & time
Date/time
22 Jun 2021 4:30pm
person Speaker

Speakers

Mark Krumholz
next_week Event series

Content navigation

Register

Description

The most important characteristic of star, which determines its properties and evolutionary path, is its mass at birth. Observations show that the most common birth mass is slightly smaller than the mass of the Sun, and that masses either much lower or much higher than this value are increasingly rare. This characteristic stellar mass appears to be nearly invariant across a huge range of environments within and beyond our Galaxy, and seems to have changed little over most of cosmic time.

Explaining its origin and universality is one of the oldest problems in theoretical astrophysics, but a fully successful theory eludes us even today. In this talk, I discuss both the history of this problem and recent progress suggesting that we may be within reach of a solution.

Mark Krumholz

About the speaker

Mark Krumholz is a theoretical and computational astrophysicist whose research focuses on flows of interstellar gas, the formation of stars and galaxies, and numerical and statistical methods for astrophysical simulation and data analysis. He received his PhD in 2005 from the University of California, Berkeley, was a Hubble Postdoctoral Fellow at Princeton University from 2005 - 2008, and was on the faculty of the University of California, Santa Cruz from 2008 - 2015. He has been a professor at the ANU since 2015.

Webinar recording

Location

Online

-35.2746393, 149.1181055

Upcoming events in this series

AI
19 Sep 2024 | 4:30 - 5:30pm

AI continues to attract significant attention across a broad frontier of application areas of commercial interest motivating a massive investment in research and development.

View the event
DNA
23 Sep 2024 | 4:30 - 5:30pm

Scientists have long sought to understand the origins of biological complexity, including what makes us, as humans, such complex beings.

View the event
Astronomy
24 Sep 2024 | 4:30 - 5:30pm

The Universe as we know it was formed in what we call the Big Bang, and has been expanding ever since.

View the event
loneliness
6 Nov 2024 | 4:30 - 5:30pm

Loneliness is one of the strongest predictors of poor health.

View the event
heatwaves 2
18 Nov 2024 | 4:30 - 5:30pm

There is no question that heatwaves and extreme heat events are increasing in frequency, intensity and duration.

View the event
healthcare
26 Nov 2024 | 4:30 - 5:30pm

The changing climate presents a significant threat to health risk factors and the capacity of healthcare providers to deliver quality and timely services.

View the event