1 / 17

The Sun

The Sun. Layers of the Sun. The Core. Cannot be directly observed Theoretical studies of the energy it radiates Extremely hot, dense gas Plasma Density of 160,000 Kg/m3 Temperature of 1.5 x 10 7 Density + Temperature Nuclear Fusion EMR = gamma rays & particles.

thetis
Télécharger la présentation

The Sun

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Sun

  2. Layers of the Sun

  3. The Core • Cannot be directly observed • Theoretical studies of the energy it radiates • Extremely hot, dense gas • Plasma • Density of 160,000 Kg/m3 • Temperature of 1.5 x 107 • Density + Temperature • Nuclear Fusion • EMR = gamma rays & particles

  4. Energy = Nuclear Fusion • Proton - Proton Chain matter is converted to energy • H+H+H+H =He + Energy • Mass of 4 H = 4.032 & Mass of 1 He = 4.003 • If the “lost” mass = .029, then using E = mc2 • How much E is this?

  5. How much energy? • 6 x 108 tons H per second • 4 x 106 tons to energy • H --> He • Amount of He in core is increasing • Core is getting bigger • Enough fuel to last another 5 billion years in present state • Temperature of core = 15 million K

  6. Radiative Zone • Lies between the core and convective zone. • Extends from the core outward to about 70% of the Sun's radius • Energy generated in core • Radiates outward • Electromagnetic radiation • Photons • Many stars have radiative zones

  7. Convective Zone • Above the radiative zone, below the photosphere • The temperature changes very rapidly with depth • Turbulent convection • Granular Texture • Heat energy and matter are carried outward in convection cells

  8. Convection Cells - Super Granules • Superheated “granules” rise from the radiative layer to the photosphere • Granules cool and sink

  9. Photosphere • Origin of visible (white) light • One of the coolest regions of the Sun • 6000 K • Only 0.1% of the gas is ionized • Densest part of the solar atmosphere • Appears as a disk with some dark spots. • Sunspots = magnetic fields • Bright = Hot, rising material • Dark = Cool, sinking material

  10. Chromosphere • Above the photosphere • 2500 kilometers thick • Appears as a thin reddish ring before & after a total eclipse • Spectra = Hydrogen • Plages = bright regions • Filaments = dark features (aka prominences) • Spicules = jets of plasma shooting up from supergranule boundaries

  11. Sunspots • Dark Spots on the Photosphere • Planet-sized regions • Dark = Cooler • 4,000 K vs. 5,800 K • The average sunspot would be about as bright as a full moon against a dark night sky. • Powerful magnetic fields around sunspots • Lead to solar flares • Coronal Mass Ejections = "solar storms" • Last from days to months • Sunspot Cycles • "sunspots" on other stars.

  12. Solar Flares • Huge explosions • Tangled magnetic fields • Snap like rubber bands • Emit huge bursts of EMR • X-rays, ultraviolet radiation, visible light, and radio waves • > 106 x energy volcanic explosion on Earth • Accompanied by Coronal Mass Ejections • Most common during "solar maximum"

  13. The dark area in the middle is a coronal hole. • These particles whiz by Earth about 5 days later, with a speed of about 700 kilometers per second, or 1.5 million miles per hour. • They then cause auroras or polar lights • cause interference in radio reception • mess up the navigation of birds. Coronal hole Mass ejection

  14. Development of Solar Flares - notice how they are contained within the magnetosphere of the sun, unless a coronal hole allows the material to escape

  15. Solar Flare with Earth as a reference

  16. The Corona • HOT! • 2,000,000 K • emits short wavelength EMR • Dark near the poles • coronal holes • source of the solar wind • Scattered white light --> plasma density • Large white regions = helmet streamers • solar plasma trapped by magnetic field.

More Related