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TES: The Sun big ? D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth) D(Sun) = 10 x D(Jupiter) More precisely, D(Sun) = 109 x D(Earth) . (See overlay) Or 1.3 million Earth volumes. massive ? M(Sun) = 330,000 M(Earth) . far ? 1 AU = 1.5x108 km = 8.3 light mins (Pluto-5.5 lt hrs) bright ? Power output at source = Luminosity, 4 x 10 26 watts. Enough power to cover surface with watt tiny Christmas tree lights. bright at Earth ? Solar Constant = 1,370 watts/m 2 . Like 14 100 watt bulbs. tent ? See abundance overlay.

NOTES: The Sun How big ? D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth) D(Sun) = 10 x D(Jupiter)

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NOTES: The Sun How big ? D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth) D(Sun) = 10 x D(Jupiter) More precisely, D(Sun) = 109 x D(Earth) . (See overlay) Or 1.3 million Earth volumes. How massive ? M(Sun) = 330,000 M(Earth) . How far ? 1 AU = 1.5x108 km = 8.3 light mins (Pluto-5.5 lt hrs) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

NOTES: The Sun

How big? D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth) D(Sun) = 10 x D(Jupiter)

More precisely, D(Sun) = 109 x D(Earth) . (See overlay)Or 1.3 million Earth volumes.

How massive? M(Sun) = 330,000 M(Earth) .

How far? 1 AU = 1.5x108 km = 8.3 light mins (Pluto-5.5 lt hrs)

How bright? Power output at source = Luminosity, L = 4 x 1026 watts. Enough power to cover surface with 100 watt tiny Christmas tree lights.

How bright at Earth? Solar Constant = 1,370 watts/m2.Like 14 100 watt bulbs.

Content? See abundance overlay.

Page 2: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

How big? Roughly (diameters) D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth) D(Sun) = 10 x D(Jupiter)

More precisely, D(Sun) = 109 x D(Earth) .

Page 3: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

D(Sun) = 109 x D(Earth)Or 1.3 million Earth volumes.

Page 4: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

How massive? M(Sun) = 330,000 M(Earth) . Found usingNewton’s version of Kepler’s 3rd Law.

Page 5: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

How far?

1 AU = 1.5x108 km = 8.3 light mins (Pluto-5.5 lt hrs)About 8,000 Pluto distances to the nearest star—Alpha Centauri

Page 6: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)
Page 7: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

How bright at Earth? Solar Constant = 1,370 watts/m2.Like 14 100 watt bulbs. However, solar panelsare less than 50% efficient.

World’s largest solar facility—produces 150 megawatts.How many square meters could produce this?

Page 8: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)
Page 9: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

Layers of the sun:Three means of energy transfer:Conduction (throughout), Convection, and Radiation.

Photosphere:T= 5700 K

ChromosphereT = 15,000 K

CoronaT = 2 million K

Page 10: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

Radiation: high energy gamma rays emitted in core are absorbed and re-emitted as multiple photons, degrading energy. This is called the random walk.It takes 1-10 million years for energy to reach the sun's surface.

Core: T = 15 million K

Page 11: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

Source of Energy (Nuclear Fusion):P-P Process: Protons must have enough energy to overcome electric repulsion and fuse together. This means 10 million degrees K (Kelvin = Centigrade + 273).Dominates in stars less than 1.5 solar masses.

p + p --> D + positron + neutrino p + D --> 3He + gamma ray

2 3He --> 4He + 2p

Page 12: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

CNO Process: In stars above 1.5 solar masses there is recycledcarbon in the core, which works as a catalyst for fusing protons into Helium 4. Catalyst: unchanged, but facilitates process.

Page 13: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

Spectrum: Continuous spectrum with hundreds of dark lines. Peak wavelength gives surface temperature T = 5700 K of photosphere. We can see into various depths by looking out at toward the limb, or sun's edge.

Page 14: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

Sunspots: Maximum every 11 years. 1. Sun's magn. pole also flips every 11 years.

Page 15: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

They migrate toward equator.

Page 16: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

We know we have intensified magnetic fields in sunspots by the amount certain spectral lines are split apart by the Zeeman effect.

Page 17: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)
Page 18: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

No sunspots from 1650-1715 AD--Maunder minimum.No one knows why, or whether it will happen again.

Page 19: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

Sunspots are associated with flares, prominences, and coronal mass ejection.

Page 20: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

Babcock's dynamo theory utilizes differential rotation to explain the variations in sunspots.It’s like a rubber band being wrapped around sun asit rotates. If will break eventually solar minimum.

Page 21: NOTES:    The Sun How big ?   D(Jupiter) = 10 x D(Earth)     D(Sun)     = 10 x D(Jupiter)

The solar wind of electrons (and a few protons) is increased during sunspot maximum and by solar flares.