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The Sun, our favorite star! WE CAN SEE IT REALLY WELL. The Sun is the basis for all of our knowledge of stars. Why?
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The Sun, our favorite star!

Feb 24, 2016

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The Sun, our favorite star!. WE CAN SEE IT REALLY WELL. The Sun is the basis for all of our knowledge of stars. Why?. Today we will take a journey to the center of the Sun, starting with what we can see…. …and ending up deep in the core. Overview of Solar Structure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The Sun, our favorite star!

The Sun, our favorite star!

WE CAN SEE IT REALLY WELL.

The Sun is the basis for all of our knowledge of stars. Why?

Page 2: The Sun, our favorite star!

Today we will take a journey to the center of the Sun, starting with what we can see…

…and ending up deep in the core.

Page 3: The Sun, our favorite star!

Overview of Solar Structure

Main Parts:

The Sun is made of mostly HYDROGEN and

HELIUM

Page 4: The Sun, our favorite star!

The Corona• Outer layer of the

Sun• Millions of degrees

but very diffuse• Extends millions of

kilometers into space

• Hot and energetic, gives off lots of x rays!

Mass is ejected into space as the

solar wind

Page 5: The Sun, our favorite star!

• The Sun has intense magnetic fields

• The magnetic fields release energy from the Sun

• Release seen in sunspots, flares, coronal mass ejections & other phenomena

Page 6: The Sun, our favorite star!

In detail…

Page 7: The Sun, our favorite star!

This twisting leads to the loopy structures we see!

Flares

Page 8: The Sun, our favorite star!

BE AMAZED!

Earth to scale.Yes, really.

Page 9: The Sun, our favorite star!

The Sun has an 11-year solar cycle

MinimumMaximum

The Sun’s magnetic fields create sunspots

Page 10: The Sun, our favorite star!

Visible Sunspots!Ultraviolet - 304 nmUltraviolet 284 nmUltraviolet 195 nmUltraviolet -174 nm

Page 11: The Sun, our favorite star!

temperature is about 5800 K…• Remember how the temperature and

color of stars are related? The temperature of our Sun gives it its yellowish color!

Our Sun is really yellowish green, but our atmosphere absorbs and scatters some of the blue light.

Page 12: The Sun, our favorite star!

Where is all this energy made?

The core is so hot and has such high pressure that FUSION can take placeWhy are the central pressures so high ????

In the core. Why and how?

Page 13: The Sun, our favorite star!

Gravity pulls the surface of the Sun in compresing inner layers and heating them up, but the Sun doesn’t collapse…What is pushing back???The pressure of the HOT

gas layers below.

Pressure

This applies to all layers of the Sun. Gravity pulls outer layers in, Gas Pressure pushes them out.

It is pretty hot at the center!!!!

Page 14: The Sun, our favorite star!

Why does high pressure in the core lead to Fusion?

High Temperature and Density allows nuclei to interact!

Nuclei can FUSE together:“Nuclear Fusion”

Page 15: The Sun, our favorite star!

Energy Production in Stars:

The short version.

4 Hydrogen Atoms fuse to make 1 Helium Atom and a bunch of energy.

p

p p

pnn

p

p + Energy4H 1He

4 1H + 2 e --> 4He + 2 neutrinos + 6 photons

Page 16: The Sun, our favorite star!

How does fusion generate energy?

4 protons in H are slightly more massive than the 2 protons + 2 neutrons in He

Some mass converts to

energy!

The Sun is made mostly of HYDROGEN and HELIUM

Page 17: The Sun, our favorite star!

Sunshine = Energy from Fusion

E = mc2Energy

Mass

Speed of Light

Speed of light is BIG-- so a little mass can turn into a LOT of energy!

Page 18: The Sun, our favorite star!

How many students does it take to power a lightbulb?

Wanna know what you’re worth, energy-wise?It’s pretty easy to figure out!

Take an average student, of about 70kg. E = mc2

So if we turn this whole student from mass into energy in a single second, we get:E = 6.3 x 1018 J

If a typical lightbulb is 60 Watts,the energy from a student could keep it lit for…

200 BILLION YEARS!

By comparison, the Sun shines with a luminosity of 1026 Watts.(that’s a lot of lightbulbs)

Page 19: The Sun, our favorite star!

review:

The next two layers of the Sun are all about getting the energy being made in the core out into space!

It takes a lot of time, but we get it eventually.

• Gravity compresses and heats the center of the sun

• At the core nuclear reactions take place• The Sun is a giant nuclear reactor• Energy flows from the core outward, but how does it get out and end up as sunshine?

Page 20: The Sun, our favorite star!

How does energy get from one place to another?

1. Convection

3. Radiation

2. Conduction

Convection and Radiation are most important for the Sun!

Page 21: The Sun, our favorite star!

ConvectionHot stuff rises…

Cool stuff sinks! BOILING

Metal of the pan heats by conduction……heat travels through the atoms of the pan

Not very important for stars!

Conduction

Ionized gas

Radiation• Photons can “scatter” off of unbound

electrons• When they scatter, the photons share

their energy with the electrons• The electrons get hotter

Page 22: The Sun, our favorite star!

How do we connect what we see to the

Sun’s structure?

Sun’s Spectrum has ABSORPTION LINES

Page 23: The Sun, our favorite star!

Hot source makes a continuous thermal spectrum

Light passing through a cloud of cooler gas gets some light

absorbed out: ABSORPTION SPECTRUM

Page 24: The Sun, our favorite star!

So how does this apply to the Sun?

Outer layers of the Sun are cooler than interior

Interior opaque part of Sun produces a thermal spectrum, while cooler outer layers produce absorption lines!

Page 25: The Sun, our favorite star!

Really high resolution spectrum of the Sun:lots of absorption lines!

Page 26: The Sun, our favorite star!

Compare Burning with Fusion

• 1 gallon of gas powers my beautiful red Velostar for about 25 miles

• 1 gallon of hydrogen fusion would power my Velostar for 140 million miles and farther

• All the way to the Sun!

Page 27: The Sun, our favorite star!

How Much Fusion a Second?

• Einstein’s formula– E = m c2

• The luminosity of the Sun is – 4 x 1026 Watts

• So …The Sun loses 4 million tons of mass per

second!

Page 28: The Sun, our favorite star!

The Sun Takes About 4 Weeks to Rotate

Page 29: The Sun, our favorite star!

• We know diameter & mass• Density = mass / volume

– Density = 1.4 times water!– Low density + – Hot temperature The Sun is a ball of gas!

• What is the sun made of?

• Determined from study of spectrum and atomic spectra in the laboratory

• 74% Hydrogen• 25% Helium• 1% All other elements

Page 30: The Sun, our favorite star!

Particles emitted by the sun detected on the Earth confirm picture of the Sun given in this power point. Good night.