Title: The Sun
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The Sun
Our Star
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General Properties
- Only appears so bright because it is so close.
- 109 times Earths diameter
- 333,000 times Earths mass
- Consists entirely of gas (av. density 1.4
g/cm3)
- Central temperature 15 million 0K
- Surface temperature 5800 0K
3Recall Which parts of the sun could only be seen
during a total solar eclipse?
- Prominences
- The solar corona
- Sun spots
- 1 and 2
- All of the above.
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4Structure of the Sun
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Only visible during solar eclipses
Apparent surface of the sun
Heat Flow
Temp. incr. inward
Solar interior
5The Suns Interior Structure
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Photosphere
Energy transport via convection (explained soon)
Flow of energy
Energy transport via radiation
Energy generation via nuclear fusion
Animation
Temp, density and pressure decr. outward
6Do we have a direct view of the suns energy
source?
- Yes, because the sun is just a transparent gas
ball. - Yes, because most of the energy is produced very
close to the surface. - Yes, because the suns center is so bright that
the light is shining through any material. - No, because the sun has a non-transparent solid
surface. - No, because the radiation produced in the center
is scattered around many times on its way towards
the surface.
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7Energy Production
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Energy generation in the sun (and all other
stars)
Binding energy due to strong force on short
range, strongest of the 4 known forces
electromagnetic, weak, strong, gravitational
Nuclear Fusion
fusing together 2 or more lighter nuclei to
produce heavier ones.
Nuclear fusion can produce energy up to the
production of iron
For elements heavier than iron, energy is gained
by nuclear fission.
8How is energy produced in an H bomb?
- (Chemical) Burning of hydrogen.
- Nuclear fusion of hydrogen into heavier elements.
- Nuclear fission of hydrogen.
- Nuclear fission of heavier elements into
hydrogen. - Nuclear fission of heavier elements into elements
heavier than hydrogen.
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9Energy generation in the SunThe Proton-Proton
Chain
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Need large proton speed (? high temperature) to
overcome Coulomb barrier (electromagnetic
repulsion between protons).
Basic reaction 4 1H ? 4He energy
4 protons have 0.04810-27 kg ( 0.7 ) more mass
than 4He.
T 107 0K 10 million 0K
- Energy gain Dmc2
- 0.4310-11 J
- per reaction.
Sun needs 1038 reactions, transforming 5 million
tons of mass into energy every second, to resist
its own gravity.
10Energy Transport
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Energy generated in the suns center must be
transported to the surface.
Inner layers Radiative energy transport
Outer layers (including photosphere) Convection
Cool gas sinking down
Bubbles of hot gas rising up
Gas particles of solar interior
g-rays
11Granulation
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is the visible consequence of convection
12Which every-day phenomenon is another example of
convective energy transport?
- Gas bubbles rising up in a soda drink.
- Gas bubbles rising up in boiling water.
- Giant waves moving onto the sea shore.
- Earthquakes.
- All of the above.
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13Which every-day phenomenon is another example of
radiative energy transport?
- The heat of a bonfire warming you when youre
setting close to it. - Heating food in the microwave oven.
- The air around a light bulb heating up when the
light is on. - None of the above.
- All of the above.
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14Very Important Warning
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Never look directly at the sun through a
telescope or binoculars!!!
This can cause permanent eye damage even
blindness.
Use a projection technique or a special sun
viewing filter.
15Sun Spots (I)
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16Sun Spots (II)
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Active Regions
Visible
Ultraviolet
Cooler regions of the photosphere (T 4240 K).
17Considering that sunspots are cooler regions on
the photosphere with a temperature of 4240 K,
how would you think a sunspot would appear if you
could put it on the night sky without the sun
surrounding it?
- It would be invisible.
- It would glow very faintly, similar to the faint
red glow of the eclipsed moon. - It would appear moderately bright, comparable to
the brightest stars. - It would appear very bright even brighter than
the full moon. - It would be almost as bright as the sun itself.
18Solar Activity, seen in soft X-rays
19What can we infer from the fact that we see the
gas above active regions (sun spots) mostly in
ultraviolet light and X-rays?
- The gas must be very dense.
- The gas must be very dilute.
- The gas must be very hot.
- The gas must be very cold.
- The gas must consist mostly of Helium.
20Sun Spots (III)
Magnetic North Poles
Magnetic South Poles
Related to magnetic activity.
Magnetic field in sun spots is about 1000 times
stronger than average.
In sun spots, magnetic field lines emerge out of
the photosphere.
21Magnetic Field Lines
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Magnetic North Pole
Magnetic South Pole
Magnetic Field Lines
Mass ejection from the sun often follow magnetic
field loops.
22Magnetic Loops
Magnetic field lines
23What does the term Solar Maximum refer to?
- A period of high luminosity of the sun.
- The culmination of the sun in the southern
direction on the celestial sphere. - A temporary maximum of the number of sun spots.
- A temporary maximum of the surface temperature of
the sun. - A temporary maximum of the risk to get sun burned.
24The Solar Cycle
Solar Maxima
11-year cycle
Reversal of magnetic polarity (during solar
minima)
After 11 years, North/South order of
leading/trailing sun spots is reversed
gt Total solar cycle 22 years
25The Solar Cycle (II)
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Maunder Butterfly Diagram
Sun spot cycle starts out with spots at higher
latitudes on the sun
Evolve to lower latitudes (towards the equator)
throughout the cycle.
Animation
26The Chromosphere
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Region of suns atmosphere just above the
photosphere.
Chromospheric structures visible in Ha emission
(filtergram)
27The Chromosphere (II)
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Spicules filaments of hot gas, visible in Ha
emission.
28The Solar Corona
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Very hot (T 1 million 0K), low-density gas
29Prominences
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Looped Prominences gas ejected from the suns
photosphere, flowing along magnetic loops
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Eruptive Prominences
Extreme events, called coronal mass ejections
(CMEs) and solar flares, can significantly
influence Earths magnetic field structure and
cause northern lights (aurora borealis).
(Ultraviolet images)
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Eruptive Prominences
(Ultraviolet images)