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The Sun…the star in the solar system The Sun provides us with a chance to see a star up close
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The Sun…the star in the solar system

Feb 01, 2016

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The Sun…the star in the solar system. The Sun provides us with a chance to see a star up close. Question for SGU graduates (or anybody else): what kind of star is the Sun?. Question for SGU graduates (or anybody else): what kind of star is the Sun?. 18 Scorpii… The “solar twin”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The Sun…the star in the solar system

The Sun provides us with a chance to see a star up close

Page 2: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Question for SGU graduates (or anybody else): what kind of star is the Sun?

Page 3: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Question for SGU graduates (or anybody else): what kind of star is the Sun?

18 Scorpii…

The “solar twin”

Page 4: The Sun…the star in the solar system

One emphasizes (somewhat) different aspects of the Sun in a solar system

astronomy class

Reign of Akhenaten and Nefertiti (~1350 BCE)

Page 5: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Point to make: when observed in the light of ultraviolet lines, the Sun is not a

constant, static object

Page 6: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Because the Sun is the type of star it is…

• It produces the “right luminosity” for us (3.85E26 Watts)

• This luminosity is believed to have been stable for the last several billion years

• It shines at this luminosity long enough for us to arrive on the scene and enjoy it

Page 7: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Let’s begin exploring the Sun as a solar system object

What we see as the disk of the Sun is a layer in its atmosphere called the photosphere

Page 8: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The Sun is a beautiful illustration of Wien’s Law

The solar spectrum is a good match (although not perfect) to a blackbody spectrum

Page 9: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Let’s take a closer look at the solar photosphere…it isn’t as featureless as it seems

It is particularly interesting if you look in the light of the hydrogen alpha line (656 nanometers)

Page 10: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Granules in the Solar

Atmosphere

Granules are convection cells; the outer layer of the Sun is carrying heat by “boiling”

Page 11: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The physics of convection is common in nature as a way of moving heat from one

place to another

demo

Page 12: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The observation of convection means the Sun gets hotter the deeper you go

Luminosity (or power output) of 3.85E26 Watts

Page 13: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Next topic: solar activity

The Sun doesn’t always look like it does today

Page 14: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Closeup of a sunspot

Sunspots are regions of strong magnetics fields (0.2 -0.4 Tesla)

Page 15: The Sun…the star in the solar system

Sunspots and their strong magnetic fields are related to more mysterious aspects of

the Sun

Above the photosphere are more rarefied and hotter parts of the solar atmosphere

Page 16: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The Chromosphere-region above the photosphere, and substantially hotter

Page 17: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The Solar Corona

What is it? How did it get that way?

Page 18: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The X-Ray Sun

Page 19: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The Temperature Profile in the Solar Atmosphere

Page 20: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The process or processes responsible for heating the solar corona almost certainly

involve the solar magnetic field

We just don’t know how

Page 21: The Sun…the star in the solar system

The hot, rarefield, magnetically-dominated parts of the solar atmosphere show continual activity and energy release

erupting solar prominence...April 21, 2010