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The Sun: A Garden Variety Star

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so heavy, everything else orbits around it! so heavy, it makes its ... Aurora borealis in the northern hemisphere. Aurora australis in the southern hemisphere ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Sun: A Garden Variety Star


1
The Sun A Garden
-Variety Star
2
The Sun
  • Biggest object in the
    solar system
  • diameter 1,392,000 km
  • 109 x Earths diameter
  • 10 x Jupiters diameter
  • Most Massive
  • 333,000 x Earths mass
  • 1,000 x Jupiters mass
  • so heavy, everything else orbits around it!
  • so heavy, it makes its own heat and light
  • Temperature of 15,000,000 K in its core
  • nuclear power!

3
The Suns Profile
4
The Suns Composition
  • The Sun contains the same elements as the Earth,
    but not in the same proportions
  • About 73 of the Suns mass is comes from
    hydrogen, and another 25 from helium
  • Other chemical elements make up the rest 2
  • The fact that the Sun are mostly made up of H and
    He was first shown by Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
  • The 1st woman to get a PhD in astronomy in the
    U.S.

5
The parts of the Sun
6
The Sun's Interior
  • From inside out
  • Core
  • Radiative zone
  • Convection zone
  • Photosphere
  • Chromosphere
  • Transition region
  • Corona

7
The Sun's Core
  • The core
  • is the innermost 10 of the Sun's mass
  • generates energy from nuclear fusion
  • has the highest temperature and density
  • temperature 10 million K
  • density 160 x density of water 20 x density
    of iron
  • at this temperature, the core is a gas
  • no molten interior

8
How does Heat from the Core Reach Us?
  • Three ways to transfer heat
  • Conduction direct contact
  • A spoon in a hot cup of coffee gets warm
  • Convection moving currents in a fluid
  • Hot air rises
  • Hot current in boiling water
  • Radiation electromagnetic waves emitted by a
    heat source and absorbed by a cooler material
  • Electric stove
  • Heat from the Sun reaches us through the EM waves
    it emits

9
Radiative Zone
  • Radiation transfers heat from the interior of the
    Sun to its "cooler" outer layers
  • The core radiation zone make up 85 of the Sun
  • The temperature drops from 10 million K at the
    inner side of the radiative zone to 2 million K
    at its edge
  • The energy generated in the core is carried by
    photons that bounce from particle to particle
    through the radiative zone
  • The photons are too energetic to
    be absorbed by atoms
  • Each photon bounces so many
    times that it is estimated
    to take
    one million years to reach the
    outer edge of the
    region

10
Convection Zone
  • Matter at the base of the convection zone is
    cool enough (2 million K) for the atoms to
    absorb energy and hold on to it
  • Convection occurs in this region
  • The hotter material near the top of the radiation
    zone (the bottom of the convection zone) rises
    while the cooler material sinks heated below
    like a pot of boiling water
  • It takes a week for the hot material to carry its
    energy to the top of the convection zone

convection zone
radiative zone
11
Photosphere
  • This is the Suns deepest layer that one
    can see from the outside
  • Photosphere means light sphere
  • It is the visible surface of the Sun
  • From this layer, photons can finally escape to
    space
  • The surface is not something one could land or
    float on
  • The photosphere is about 500 km thick
  • The gas is so dense that you could not see
    through it
  • The gas emits a continuous spectrum of light
  • It features sunspots

12
Temperature of Photosphere
  • The photosphere temperature is about 5,800 K
  • The sunspots appear darker because they are
    cooler than their surroundings
  • The center of a typical sunspot has a temperature
    of 4,000 K
  • The spectrum and energy output of the radiation
    emitted from the photosphere obey Wiens Law and
    Stefan-Boltzmann law

13
Features of Photosphere
  • Sunspots
  • dark spots, 1500 K, cooler than surroundings
  • glow by themselves

granules tops of convection cells 700 to 1000 km
diameter last 10 minutes centers 100 K hotter
than edges
14
Sunspots
  • Discovered by Galileo Galilei
  • Sun's surface sprinkled with small dark regions -
    sunspots
  • Sunspots are darker because they are cooler by
    1000 to 1500 K than the rest of the photosphere
  • Spots can last a few days or as long as a few
    months 
  • Galileo used the longer-lasting sunspots to map
    the rotation patterns of the Sun
  • Sunspots number varies in a cycle with an average
    period of 11 years
  • Cycle starts with minimum and most of them are
    at around 35 from the solar equator
  • At solar maximum (number peaked), about 5.5
    years later, most of the sunspots are within
    just 5 of the solar equator

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17
Sunspots and Magnetic Field
  • Sunspots regions of strong magnetic fields
  • Found by observation of Zeeman effect

18
Sun Rotates
  • Galileo
  • discovered sunspots
  • sunspots moved ? sun rotates
  • Rotation speed depends on latitude
  • equator once/25 days
  • 30º N once/26.5 days
  • 60º N once/30 days
  • Jupiter also does this

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20
Chromosphere
  • Visible during solar eclipses as a thin pink
    layer at the edge of the dark Moon
  • Colorful layer color sphere
  • Color due to hydrogen bright emission line
  • Also shows yellow emission due to helium
    discovered in 1868 new element previously not
    seen on Earth
  • Helium was found on Earth in 1895
  • The chromosphere is only 2,000 to 3,000 km thick
  • Temperature rises outward away from the
    photosphere from 4,500 K to 10,000 K

21
Transition Region
  • Its a thin region (about 10 km thick) in the
    Suns atmosphere where temperature changes from
    10,000 K to nearly 1,000,000 K

22
Solar Weather
  • The Sun has complex and violent weather patterns
  • Chromosphere contains jet-like spikes of gas
    called spicules
  • Spicules rise vertically through the chromosphere
  • Last 10 minutes
  • Consist of gas jets, at 30 km/s
  • Rise to heights of 5000 to 20000 km
  • T chromosphere

23
Corona (1)
  • The outermost part of the Suns
    atmosphere is called the corona
  • It is visible during total solar
    eclipses as a
    pearly-white glow
    around the dark Moon 
  • The corona has a very high
    temperature of 1-2
    million K
  • It is known to be very hot because it contains
    multiply ionized atoms
  • At very high temperatures, atoms like iron can
    have 9 to 13 electrons ejected (the atoms become
    ionized)
  • 9-times ionized iron is only produced at a
    temperature of 1.3 million K
  • 13-times ionized iron means the temperature gets
    up to 2.3 million K! 

Total solar eclipse in 1973
24
Corona (2)
  • Most of the corona is trapped close to Sun by
    loops of magnetic field lines
  • In X-rays, those regions appear bright
  • Some magnetic field lines do not loop back to
    the Sun and will appear dark in X-rays
  • These are called coronal holes
  • More details visible at short wavelengths

A solar eclipse photographed in the extreme
ultraviolet taken by the SOHO spacecraft 
25
X-rays from the Corona
26
Prominences
  • Bright clouds of gas forming above the sunspots
  • Quiet prominences
  • 40,000 km above surface
  • Last days to several weeks
  • Eruptive prominences
  • 700 km/s
  • Rare
  • Surge prominences
  • Last up to a few hours
  • Shoot gas up to 300,000 km
  • Gas speed 1300 km/s

27
Prominences follow magnetic-field loops
28
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30
Solar Flares
  • Solar flares are eruptions more powerful than
    surge prominences
  • Flares last from a few minutes to a few hours
  • A lot of ionized material is ejected in a flare
  • Unlike the material in prominences, the
    solar-flare material moves with enough energy to
    escape the Sun's gravity
  • When such a burst of ions reaches the Earth, it
    interferes with radio communication
  • Sometimes a solar flare will cause voltage pulses
    or surges in power and telephone lines
  • Brownouts or blackouts may result
  • Humans traveling outside the protection of the
    Earth's magnetic field will need to have
    shielding from the powerful ions in a flare

31
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32
Solar Wind
  • Fast-moving charged particles (mostly protons and
    electrons) can escape the Sun's gravitational
    attraction
  • The stream of particles is called the solar wind
  • They move outward at a speed of about 400 km/s
  • They can reach the farthest reaches of the solar
    system
  • Solar-wind particles passing close to a planet
    with a magnetic field are deflected around the
    planet
  • Some are deflected to the planet's magnetic poles
  • As the particles hit the planet's atmosphere,
    they cause the molecules in the atmosphere to
    produce beautiful curtains of light called the
    auroras
  • Aurora borealis in the northern hemisphere
  • Aurora australis in the southern hemisphere

33
Is the Sun a Variable Star?
  • What is more certain than that the Sun will rise
    tomorrow?
  • Weve already seen that sunspots follow an
    11-year cycle
  • On longer time scales, the Sun undergoes changes
    in overall activity
  • Changes are only about 0.1!
  • Yet this is enough to affect our climate
  • In the mid 1600s the Suns output was
    particularly low ? the Little Ice Age
  • Other stars are seen to vary by 0.3, up to 1
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