Star Formation (Oxford AQA IGCSE Physics)

Revision Note

Caroline Carroll

Expertise

Physics Subject Lead

Star Formation

  • A star goes through a sequence of evolutionary stages, known as the life cycle of a star

  • All stars follow the same initial stages:

    Nebula → protostar → main sequence star

Nebula

  • Dust and gas (mainly hydrogen and helium) found in space experience gravitational attraction which pulls them together

  • Smaller masses of dust are attracted by larger masses of dust to form a giant interstellar cloud of gas and dust, called a nebular

  • All stars, including the Sun, began as a nebular

Nebula

Nebula, IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes
A nebula is a cloud of gas and dust in space (Image courtesy of NASA)

Protostar

  • The gravitational attraction within a nebula pulls the particles closer together until a hot ball of gas forms, known as a protostar

  • As the particles are pulled closer together the density of the protostar will increase

  • This results in more frequent collisions between the particles which causes the temperature to increase

  • A protostar continues to get bigger as it attracts more particles

  • This also causes its temperature to increase as kinetic energy is transferred from the impacting particles to the protostar.

Protostar

Protostar, IGCSE & GCSE Physics Revision Notes
The nebula collapses due to gravity and begins to rotate to form a protostar (Image courtesy of NASA)

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Caroline Carroll

Author: Caroline Carroll

Caroline graduated from the University of Nottingham with a degree in Chemistry and Molecular Physics. She spent several years working as an Industrial Chemist in the automotive industry before retraining to teach. Caroline has over 12 years of experience teaching GCSE and A-level chemistry and physics. She is passionate about creating high-quality resources to help students achieve their full potential.