Lecture 32 – Stellar Remnants: Neutron Stars and Black Holes
Summary / Checklist of the Main Concepts to Understand and Remember

Neutron Stars and Pulsars  
What are neutron stars, and how do they form?  
What is the approximate range of masses for neutron stars? How large as they? (Why can't they be more massive, or less massive?)  
Why are neutron stars very difficult to see directly?  
What are pulsars? How are they detected, and how are they related to neutron stars?  
     
Black Holes  
What is a black hole? What is the event horizon? How is it possible that black holes attract light, if photons of light have no mass?  
Which theory says that space and time can stretch and warp as the universe evolves? Why is light deflection evidence for it?  
How do we think most black holes form, and what are their masses? How large are these stellar black holes, typically?  
How do we normally detect a stellar black hole from Earth? Why are most of the known ones in binary systems?  
What happens to matter when it approaches the event horizon, and why do we call that an extreme case of tides (tidal forces)?  
What are supermassive black holes, and where do we find them?  
     
     
     
     

Topics from the lecture page and textbook not listed above [or between square brackets] were not covered in class;
Underlined words indicate that I will expect students to remember a number or a name related to that topic.

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