Title: Our Star
1Our Star
2Why does the Sun shine?
3Is it on FIRE?
4Is it on FIRE?
Chemical Energy Content
10,000 years
Luminosity
5Is it on FIRE? NO!
Chemical Energy Content
10,000 years
Luminosity
6Is it CONTRACTING?
7Is it CONTRACTING?
Gravitational Potential Energy
25 million years
Luminosity
8Is it CONTRACTING? NO!
Gravitational Potential Energy
25 million years
Luminosity
9E mc2 Einstein, 1905
It is powered by NUCLEAR ENERGY!
Nuclear Potential Energy (core)
10 billion years
Luminosity
10Why does the Sun shine?
- Chemical Gravitational energy cant explain how
Sun could shine for gt 25 million years. - Sun must be stable, balancing gravity pulling in
with forces pushing out from light and heat.
Chemical Energy?
Gravitational Energy?
11Why does the Sun shine?
-
- Gravitational equilibrium balance of forces in
out - Sun shines because gravitational equilibrium
keeps core hot dense generate energy through
nuclear fusion.
12Weight of upper layers compresses lower layers
13Gravitational equilibrium Energy provided by
fusion maintains the pressure.
14What is the Suns structure?
15What is the Suns structure?
- From what we can see going outwards
- Photosphere
- Chromosphere
- Corona
These we CAN see measure with Visible-light,
UV, X-ray telescopes in orbit on Earth
16Photosphere
Radius 6.9 ? 108 m (109 times Earth) Mass
2 ? 1030 kg (300,000 Earths) Luminosity
3.8 ? 1026 watts
17- Photosphere
- Visible surface 6,000 K
- Seen in Visible Light
- Shows
- Dark limb
- Granules
- Sunspots!
- Absorption lines
18Granules seen in the Photosphere
19Granules seen in the Photosphere are the visible
top of a current of hot gas
20Sunspots seen in the Photosphere
21The Chromosphere seen during a total solar
eclipse
- Credit Chromosphere image courtesy Luc Viatour
and Windows to the Universe, http//www.windows.uc
ar.edu
22Chromosphere Middle layer of solar atmosphere
104105 K Seen in UV Light Shows emission
lines Features Prominences, Flares, Spicules
23Spicules seen in the Chromosphere (UV)
24(No Transcript)
25Prominences seen in the Chromosphere
26Prominences seen in the Chromosphere
27Look carefully you can see Chabot!
28(No Transcript)
29Corona Outermost layer of solar atmosphere 1
million K Seen in X-rays Shows emission lines
faint continuous spectrum
30The Corona Visible Light
The Corona X-ray Light
31(No Transcript)
32Solar wind A flow of charged particles
(electrons, protons, some helium nuclei) from the
surface of the Sun Creates Aurora
33(No Transcript)
34How do we know what is happening inside the Sun?
35What is the Suns structure?
- Going inwards to layers we cannot see
- Convection zone
- Radiation zone
- Core
These we cant see we model with computer
simulations, observations of surface features to
suggest structure, and observations of neutrinos
to hint at fusion reactions taking place in the
core.
36(No Transcript)
37Convection zone Beneath Photosphere Creates
granules we see Energy transported upward by
rising hot gas
38Bright blobs on photosphere where hot gas reaches
the surface
39Convection (rising hot gas) takes energy to the
surface.
40Patterns of vibration on the surface tell us
about what the Sun is like inside.
41Radiation zone Energy transported upward by
Gamma Ray X-ray photons Determine extent based
on computer models
42Core Energy generated by nuclear fusion 15
million K Generates gamma rays Inner 10 of sun
43Data on solar vibrations agree with mathematical
models of solar interior.
44How does nuclear fusion occur in the Sun?
Fusion is the UNITING of light atomic nuclei into
heavier nuclei, releasing binding energy in the
form of gamma ray radiation and other particles
45Fusion Small nuclei stick together to make a
bigger one (Sun, stars)
Fission Big nucleus splits into smaller
pieces (Nuclear power plants)
46High temperatures enable nuclear fusion to happen
in the core.
47Sun releases energy by fusing four hydrogen
nuclei into one helium nucleus.
48Hans Bethe
- Deduced Proton-Proton Sequence for Hydrogen
Fusion to Helium inside Stars - Predicted neutrinos to balance equations
- Nobel Prize in 1967 for contributing to discovery
of neutrinos - Active in Non-Nuclear Proliferation post WWII
49Hans Bethe
- The Temperature of the Sun. Web of Stories.
YouTube http//www.webofstories.com/play/4536?oMS
-
- Hans Bethe, who calls himself the "H-bomb's
midwife", reflects on Hiroshima. Web of Stories.
YouTube. http//www.youtube.com/watch?vapgB_NR59s
s - Kalilialouise. Hans Bethe The Moral
Responsibility of the Scientist NHD 2009 .
YouTube. http//www.youtube.com/watch?vc7iJtT41yy
8
50Cecelia Payne
- Deduced from Spectra Sun was primarily Hydrogen
- Hired as technical assistant to Harlow Shapley
- First Woman to Head Department at Harvard (Chair
of Astronomy)
51Protonproton chain is how hydrogen fuses into
helium in Sun
52 IN 4 protons OUT 4He nucleus 2 gamma rays 2
positrons 2 neutrinos Total mass is 0.7 lower.
53Neutrinos created during fusion fly directly
through the Sun. Observations of these solar
neutrinos can tell us whats happening in the
core.
54Ray Davis Homestake Mine Experiment discovered
neutrinos but failed to find the predicted
number.
55Solar neutrino problem More recent observations
find the right number of neutrinos, but some have
changed form.
56Thought Question
- What would happen inside the Sun if a slight rise
in core temperature led to a rapid rise in fusion
energy? - A. The core would expand and heat up slightly.
- B. The core would expand and cool.
- C. The Sun would blow up like a hydrogen bomb.
57Thought Question
- What would happen inside the Sun if a slight rise
in core temperature led to a rapid rise in fusion
energy? - A. The core would expand and heat up slightly.
- B. The core would expand and cool.
- C. The Sun would blow up like a hydrogen bomb.
Solar thermostat keeps burning rate steady
58Solar 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
59What causes solar activity?
60Solar activity is like weather
- Sunspots
- Solar flares
- Solar prominences
- All are related to magnetic fields.
61Sunspots Are cooler than other parts of the
Suns surface (4,000 K) Are regions with strong
magnetic fields
62Zeeman Effect We can measure magnetic fields in
sunspots by observing the splitting of spectral
lines
63Charged particles spiral along magnetic field
lines.
64Loops of bright gas often connect sunspot pairs.
65Magnetic activity causes solar flares that send
bursts of X-rays and charged particles into space.
66Magnetic activity also causes solar prominences
that erupt high above the Suns surface.
67The corona appears bright in X-ray photos in
places where magnetic fields trap hot gas.
68How does solar activity affect humans?
69Coronal mass ejections send bursts of energetic
charged particles out through the solar system.
70Charged particles streaming from the Sun can
disrupt electrical power grids and disable
communications satellites.
71How does solar activity vary with time?
72The number of sunspots rises and falls in 11-year
cycles.
73The sunspot cycle has something to do with the
winding and twisting of the Suns magnetic field.