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Do Activity

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Bright blobs in photosphere are where hot gas is reaching the `surface' ... the rest of the way to the photosphere, where it is radiated into space as sunlight. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Do Activity


1
Do Activity 41 (pages 153-155),Questions 1
through 16
  • then well have a clicker quiz

2
9. Which star in Figure 4 has the highest
temperature?
  • Star A
  • Star B
  • Star C

3
11. If a star cools, it shrinks because
  • Lower temperature means less volume
  • Fusion reactions which occur at a lower
    temperature convert less mass into energy
  • Lower temperature means less pressure to resist
    gravity

4
13. When you expend energy to blow up a balloon,
where does that energy go?
  • Mostly into heating the air in the balloon
  • Mostly into elastic energy stored in the material
    of the balloon
  • Nowhere energy is conserved

5
Reading Quiz using Clickers
6
What powers the sun?
  • The fission of hydrogen into helium, which
    converts some mass into energy
  • The fission of helium into hydrogen, which
    converts some mass into energy
  • The complete conversion of the mass of some
    hydrogen into energy
  • The fusion of hydrogen into helium, which
    converts some mass into energy

7
What conditions are required for nuclear fusion
of hydrogen to occur?
  • Temperature of millions of degrees
  • High density
  • Uranium present
  • All of the above
  • 1 and 2 only
  • 1 and 3 only

8
Why do sunspots appear dark in pictures of the
Sun?
  • They are holes in the solar surface through which
    we can see through to deeper, darker layers of
    the Sun.
  • They are thick clouds of cool gas which block the
    light from underneath.
  • They are too cold to emit any visible light.
  • They are actually bright, but appear dark against
    the even brighter regions which surround them.

9
What is the Suns structure?
10
(No Transcript)
11
Photosphere Visible surface of Sun (not solid)
5,800 Kelvin 5,500 Celsius
12
10.2 Nuclear Fusion in the Sun
  • Our Goals for Learning
  • How does nuclear fusion occur in the Sun?
  • How does the energy from fusion get out of the
    Sun?
  • How do we know what is happening inside the Sun?

13
How does nuclear fusion occur in the Sun?
14
High temperature enables nuclear fusion to happen
in the core
15
Sun releases energy by fusing four hydrogen
nuclei into one helium nucleus, which has less
mass. The difference in mass is released as
energy, in the form of gamma-ray photons.
16
(No Transcript)
17
IN 4 protons OUT 4He nucleus 2 neutrinos 2
gamma rays 2 positrons (which collide with 2
electrons, making more gamma rays) Total mass
is 0.7 lower (4 million tons of matter
converted to energy every second inside the Sun!)
18
Solar Thermostat
Rise in core temperature causes fusion rate to
rise, so core expands and cools down
Decline in core temperature causes fusion rate to
drop, so core contracts and heats up
Structure of the Sun
19
How does the energy from fusion get out of the
Sun?
20
Energy gradually leaks out of radiation zone in
form of randomly bouncing photons it takes
millions of years for this to happen.
21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
How do we know what is happening inside the Sun?
24
We learn about the Sun's interior by
  • Making mathematical models
  • Observing solar vibrations (sun quakes'), just
    like we learn about the Earth's interior from
    earthquakes
  • Observing solar neutrinos, a kind of particle
    that rarely interacts with other particles

25
Patterns of vibration on surface tell us about
what Sun is like inside Results agree very well
with mathematical models of solar interior
26
Neutrinos created during fusion fly directly
through the Sun Observations of these solar
neutrinos can tell us whats happening in core
27
Solar neutrino problem Early searches for solar
neutrinos failed to find the predicted number
28
Solar neutrino problem Early searches for solar
neutrinos failed to find the predicted
number More recent observations with the Sudbury
Neutrino Observatory (pictured) in northern
Ontario find the right number of neutrinos, but
some have changed form, which allowed them to
escape earlier searches.
29
What have we learned?
  • How does nuclear fusion occur in the Sun?
  • Fusion of hydrogen into helium, which occurs via
    the protonproton chain. Gravitational
    equilibrium acts as a thermostat that keeps the
    fusion rate steady.

30
What have we learned?
  • How do we know what is happening inside the
    Sun?
  • theoretical models
  • use known laws of physics and then check the
    models against observations and studies

31
What have we learned?
  • How does the energy from fusion get out of the
    Sun?
  • Energy moves through the deepest layers of the
    Sunthe core and the radiation zonein the form
    of randomly bouncing photons. After energy
    emerges from the radiation zone, convection
    carries it the rest of the way to the
    photosphere, where it is radiated into space as
    sunlight.

32
Quiz using Clickers
33
What powers the sun?
  • The fission of hydrogen into helium, which
    converts some mass into energy
  • The fission of helium into hydrogen, which
    converts some mass into energy
  • The complete conversion of the mass of some
    hydrogen into energy
  • The fusion of hydrogen into helium, which
    converts some mass into energy

34
Why is the Sun very dense on the inside?
  • Denser materials sank to the center
  • It formed from dense material
  • Pressure of the overlying gas keeps the density
    high

35
Why are very high temperatures required for
nuclear fusion to occur?
  • It takes energy to make energy
  • High temperatures and speeds involve Einsteins
    theory of relativity
  • Only high-speed protons approach each other close
    enough for nuclear forces to bind them
  • They arent. When fusion happens at room
    temperature it is called cold fusion

36
By the time photons reach the surface of the Sun,
they are mostly
  • Infrared light (heat)
  • Visible light
  • Ultraviolet light
  • X rays
  • Gamma rays

37
How do photons get from the core of the Sun to
the surface of the Sun?
  • They travel at lightspeed
  • They are absorbed, then emitted by many atoms
  • They are conducted (heat conduction)
  • Gamma rays
  • X rays
  • None of the above
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