Title: The Sun - Our Star
1The Sun - Our Star
- Suns diameter 100 times the Earths
- Suns mass is 700 times the mass of all the
planets put together - The energy source of the Sun is the conversion of
hydrogen atoms into helium atoms through nuclear
fusion in the core of the Sun. Without this
energy source the Sun would collapse. - Composition of the Sun is 71 Hydrogen, 27
Helium, 2 heavier elements
2How do we know what we know?
- Our understanding of the Sun is a combination of
measurements of observed quantities (diameter,
surface temperature, spectra) and computer models
based on physical laws (internal temperature and
density). - Models are correct so far as they can predict the
observed properties of the Sun.
3Solar Structure
- The Sun is completely gaseous.
- The atoms in this gas strongly absorb light.
- Because of this absorption energy travels very
slowly through the Sun. It takes about 100,000
years for energy to travel from the core to the
solar surface. - Above a certain height however the gas is too
thin to absorb light effectively. The point at
which the gas becomes transparent is called the
photosphere. - The photosphere is considered the surface of
the Sun. Surface temperature about 6000 Kelvin.
4Solar Structure
- At the core of the Sun, where nuclear fusion
occurs, temperatures are about 15 million degrees
Kelvin. - As this energy propagates outwards it initially
is carried by photons of light. This region of
the Sun is called the radiative zone. - Near the photosphere this process of energy
transfer becomes less efficient and energy begins
moving outward through convective motions of the
gas. As gas heats it rises to the surface. Once
it reaches the surface it releases heat and
sinks. This region is called the convective zone.
5Hydrostatic Equilibrium
- Requires that the pressure generated by the
fusion reactions in the core of the Sun must be
in exact balance with the weight of material
falling inwards due to the Suns gravity. - Without this balance the Sun would either
collapse (gravity wins) or explode (pressure
wins).
6The Suns Energy Source
- The Sun is not burning. If it were burning fuel
like coal it would have exhausted its fuel long
ago. - The slow collapse of the Sun was once thought to
be the energy source but that wouldnt have
lasted more than a few million years. - It wasnt until the 20th century that physicists
understood the process behind what powers the Sun.
7Einsteins Mass-Energy Relation
- In 1905 Albert Einstein recognized that mass and
energy were related through the formula - Emc2
- (m mass, Eenergy, cspeed of light)
- What this means is that a small amount of mass
could be converted into an enormous amount of
energy. - The means by which the Sun generates this energy
is through nuclear fusion.
Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
8Nuclear Fusion
- Nuclear fusion involves combining two atomic
nuclei together to form one, larger nucleus. - This can not occur under normal conditions
because the electrical repulsion between protons
prevents the nuclei from fusing. - At extremely high temperatures however this
electrical repulsion is overcome and the nuclei
fuse.
9Nuclear Fusion
- The specific steps of nuclear fusion follow a
process called the proton-proton chain - Through this process 2 neutrinos, 2 positrons, 2
1H and a 4He is created by the fusion of 6 1H. - The mass of all the particles created is less
than the sum of the masses of colliding
particles. This difference in mass was converted
into energy through Emc2.
10Studying the Solar Interior
- The neutrinos generated in the fusion process
escape rapidly through the Sun. - These neutrinos are very difficult to detect but
they can be detected. - This type of neutrino telescope can check
whether our understanding of the solar interior
is correct. - It seems that the number of neutrinos measured
match computer models but only if neutrinos have
mass.
A neutrino detector in Japan. This is a giant
tank of water buried deep underground. Tiny
bursts of light due to neutrinos from the Sun are
detected by light sensitive detectors on the
walls of the tank.
11Solar Magnetic Activity
- Like several of the planets the Sun generates a
magnetic field. - Unlike the planets the strength of the field
strongly varies with time and with location on
the Sun - The most easily detectable evidence for solar
magnetic activity are the Sunspots
12Sunspots
- Sunspots are dark splotches on the photosphere of
the Sun. - Sunspots are dark because they are cooler than
their surroundings. - The reason they are cooler is because intense
magnetic fields prevent hot, ionized gases from
entering so the region cools forming a spot
This sunspot is twice the size of the Earth!
13Prominences Flares
- Prominences are associated with pairs of sunspots
are are arcs of magnetic field with glowing gas
trapped inside. - Flares are explosive events where strong bursts
of X-rays are emitted. These are due to rapid
changes in the magnetic field.
14The Corona and Solar Wind
- The outer atmosphere of the Sun is called the
corona. The temperature of the corona can be
several million degrees. - Magnetic fields are thought to be responsible for
these very high temperatures. - The corona is so hot it expands outward along
with the Suns magnetic field and streams through
the Solar System. This is known as the Solar
Wind. - Depending on the Suns magnetic activity level,
the Solar Wind may change in velocity and density.
The corona is only visible from Earth during a
Solar Eclipse.
15The Solar Cycle
- Sunspots, prominences, flares and the strength of
the solar wind all vary over an approximately
11-year cycle - The magnetic field of the Sun will strengthen and
weaken over 11 years. - The polarity of the Suns field will also flip.
The North pole becomes the South pole and vice
versa. It takes 22 years to return to its
original polarity.
A plot of the number of sunspots with time from
1860 - 2000