Advanced Solar Theory (MT5810) OUTLINE 1.Observational properties of the Sun 2.MHD equations (revision) 3.Induction equation - solutions when R m >1 4.Magnetic.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Sun.
Advertisements

What is the fate of our sun and other stars?
(Space Climate School, Saariselka, March, 2009)
The Sun 6.E.1.2 Explain why Earth sustains life while other planets do not based on their properties (including types of surface, atmosphere.
The Sun 6.E.1.2 Explain why Earth sustains life while other planets do not based on their properties (including types of surface, atmosphere.
Solar Theory (MT 4510) Clare E Parnell School of Mathematics and Statistics.
Stars and Galaxies The Sun.
The Sun – Describe characteristics of the Sun (S6C3PO2 high school)
Chapter 8 The Sun – Our Star.
The Sun’s Dynamic Atmosphere Lecture 15. Guiding Questions 1.What is the temperature and density structure of the Sun’s atmosphere? Does the atmosphere.
Show 1 -- photosphere & sunspots--> SUN COURSE - SLIDE SHOW 2 1. Introduction, 2. Magnetic fields, 3. Corona.
Show 1 -- photosphere & sunspots SUN COURSE - SLIDE SHOW 3 Show 2 -- corona & solar cycle Today: SOHO.
The Sun The Sun in X-rays over several years The Sun is a star: a shining ball of gas powered by nuclear fusion. Luminosity of Sun = 4 x erg/s =
Conversations with the Earth Tom Burbine
+ The Sun. Sun Facts Makes life on our planet possible by giving us great amounts of light and heat Contains about 98% of the mass of the entire Solar.
The Sun. Sun Considered a medium STAR 93,000,000 miles away from Earth 1.39 million kilometers in diameter (one million Earths can fit inside the sun.
The Sun a medium sized star 93,000,000 miles away 109 times diameter of Earth 1 million Earths could fit in the Sun Made of gas: 82% hydrogen, 17% helium,
Part 4: A Special Star: Our Sun 1.  Our Dynamic Sun From NASA’s Video Gallery 2.
The Sun and the Heliosphere: some basic concepts…
The Sun : Our Closest Star A. The Size of The Sun 1. The sun is a medium size star. 1. The sun is a medium size star. 99 % of ALL matter in our solar.
The Sun Earth Science - Mr. Gallagher. The Sun is the Earth's nearest star. Similar to most typical stars, it is a large ball of hot electrically charged.
SUN COURSE - SLIDE SHOW 8 Today: Solar flares & coronal mass ejections (CME’s)
Our Sun. Why do we care about the Sun... - Light, heat, life - Space weather solar wind (1,000,000 mph) flares (UV, x-ray radiation) disturb Earth's magnetic.
OUR AMAZING SUN (Alexandria, March 26, 2006) Eric Priest.
Transition Region And Coronal Explorer Observes three-dimensional magnetic structures in the Photosphere Defines the geometry and dynamics of the Transition.
Lesson 3.3: The Sun.
For Us, the sun is the provider of Energy; The Provider of Life.
Chapter 9 The Sun. 9.4 The Active Sun Sunspots: appear dark because slightly cooler than surroundings:
The Sun.
The Solar Interior Core Radiation Zone Convection Zone.
The Sun ROBOTS Summer Solar Structure Core - the center of the Sun where nuclear fusion releases a large amount of heat energy and converts hydrogen.
The Sun Chapter 3 Lesson 6 Page 122.
SLIDE SHOW 3 B changes due to transport + diffusion III -- * * magnetic Reynold number INDUCTION EQUATION B moves with plasma / diffuses through it.
SUN COURSE - SLIDE SHOW 1. For Centuries We Have Worshipped the Sun E.g., Greece -- Sun God: "Helios"
The Sun.
SUN
The Sun The Sun imaged in white light by the SOHO spacecraft.
Solar Properties Has more than 99% the mass of our solar system Has more than 99% the mass of our solar system Diameter: 1,390,000 km Diameter: 1,390,000.
1. Name one part of the sun. 2. Is the sun a solid, liquid or gas? 3. How hot was the center of the sun when it officially became a star?
The Sun Distance from Earth: 150 million km OR 93 million miles Size: 1.4 million km in diameter Age: 4.5 billion years old, halfway through its 10 billion.
The Sun Youra Taroyan. Age 4.5 ×10 9 years Mean diameter 1.392×10 6 km, 109 × Earth Mass ×10 30 kg, 333,000 × Earth Volume 1.412×10 18 km 3, 1,300,000.
+ The Sun.
Our Sun.
Sun, Moon, Earth, How do they work together to help life survive? our sun.
Show 1 -- photosphere & sunspots SUN COURSE - SLIDE SHOW 4 Show 2 -- corona & solar cycle Today: Sun today + waves + prominences +UFO’s Show 3 -- SOHO.
Our Star the Sun. The Sun – Our Star Our sun is considered an “average” star and is one of the 200 BILLION stars that make up the Milky Way galaxy. But.
Reading Unit 31, 32, 51. The Sun The Sun is a huge ball of gas at the center of the solar system –1 million Earths would fit inside it! –Releases the.
THE SUN, OUR NEAREST STAR STARS ARE FORMED IN GIANT CLOUDS OF DUST CALLED NEBULA.
Outer Layers of the Sun Photosphere –Limb darkening –Sun spots Chromosphere Corona Prominences, flares, coronal mass ejections Reading
Studying the Sun HOMEWORK: REVIEW (1-7,9-12,14-17) Page 414: REVIEW (1-7,9-12,14-17) using complete sentences 15 Questions using complete sentences.
The Sun. The Sun.  Is located in the outer bands of our Galaxy  Is the center of our Solar System  Is a STAR!!!  Rotation: once in about 25 days 
The Sun The SUN Chapter 29 Chapter 29.
EARTH SUN (SOL) Radius = 1 Radius = 109 Density =1 Density = Gravity =1 Gravity = 28.0 Temperature ~ 300K Temperature ~ 5,800K.
The Sun.
OUR SUN.
OUR AMAZING SUN (Alexandria, March 26, 2006) Eric Priest.
SUN COURSE - SLIDE SHOW 7 Today: waves.
The Sun.
The Sun: Portrait of a G2V star
Chapter 20 Section 2: The Sun
What is the fate of our sun and other stars?
The Sun and Stars Lesson 2 pg. 808
The Sun *Our closest star
Properties of the Sun Visual Vocabulary.
The Sun’s Layers and Solar Activity
The Sun & It’s Solar System
Do Now 12/9/09 What is the sun made of???
The Centre of the Solar System Earth Science 11
Chapter 26: Stars and Galaxies
Astronomy notes for Phys/Geog 182
Presentation transcript:

Advanced Solar Theory (MT5810) OUTLINE 1.Observational properties of the Sun 2.MHD equations (revision) 3.Induction equation - solutions when R m >1 4.Magnetic equilibria 5.Waves 6.Solar wind 7.Reconnection 8.Instabilities Books:Solar MHD -- ER Priest Camb. Encyc. of the Sun -- K Lang Nearest Star -- L Golub & J Pasachoff

1. Observations 1.1 History Ancient observations - sunspots (chinese, greeks) - forgotten Galileo (1610) rediscovered sunspots first photograph of corona (eclipse) first solar flare observed sunspots have strong B foundations of MHD (Cowling) satellite observations of interplanetary medium 1980’s & 90’s -- development of MHD -- space observations (Skylab 73-74, Yohkoh 91-05, SOHO 95 - …, TRACE 98 - …, RHESSI 02 - …

Future Space Missions STEREO (NASA) April 2006 * Two satellites * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _* Solar Orbiter (ESA) 2012 * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ * Solar Dynamics Observatory 2008 * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _* Solar B (Japan-US-UK) Sept 2006 * Connections surface/corona

Ball of gas held together by gravity ? Chemical composition _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1.2 Properties of the SUN ? Radius _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ? Age _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ? T surface _ _ _ _ _ ? Mass/ s. system _ _ _ _ _

Some other properties ? Mean distance from Earth 93 million miles = 150 million km _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ? Rotation period = 25 days (equator), 37 days (poles) ? Mean density = 1.4 x 10 3 kg m -3 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ? Surface gravity = 274 m s -2 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ? Escape velocity at surface = 618 km s -1 _ _ _ _ _

Interior --> Core, Convection zone Atmosphere --> Photosphere, Chromosphere, Corona Overall Structure _ _ _ _ _

Covered with turbulent convection cells: * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ * (1 Mm) * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ * (15 Mm) Photosphere Temperature 6000 K ?? why

Amazing images [70 km] from La Palma (Canaries)

In close- up: points, flowers, ribbons (created by magnetic fields)

Photosphere --> Sunspots Galileo discovered (1610) w. telescope Dark because cool But why cool ? *_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _* 1.3 SUNSPOTS ??? why

Stunning Image from La Palma Penumbral structure created by B

Map of Photospheric Magnetic Field White -- towards you; Black -- away from you Regions around sunspots -- bipolar * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ *

2. Patterns of sunspots/active regions ?? why 1. Intense magnetic fields over whole Sun SURPRISES: -- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _* ?? why

1.4 CORONA (Turkey, 1999) Magnetic tubes “prominences” Next: Egypt, March 2006 SURPRISE (1940) *_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _* Fine structure ??why

* Picture with X-ray telescope:

A magnetic world Yohkoh Amazingly rich variety of MHD phenomena

TRACE (Active region) - from above

Magnetic field dominates plasma creates intricate structure/ heats From side: *_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ * ?? how

1.5 Solar Activity On top of the “Quiet Sun” (ie the background photosphere, chromo sphere & corona), there are several types of transient phenomena : (i) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (ii) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (iii) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (iv) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

(ii) Prominences On disc in chromosphere, see as long, thin structures Dark - cutting out light from below * _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _* ???

Sometimes erupt - [look like twisted tube] why ??

(iii) Solar Flare Sudden brightening in chromosphere & corona near sunspots *_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ * How ??

(iv) Coronal Mass Ejections SOHO Coronagraph -- Artificial eclipse Can reach Earth - communications / satellites Discovered huge ejections of plasma ?? *_ _ _ _ _ _ _*

1.6 SOHO(Solar & Heliospheric Observatory) Observing Sun continuously for 1st time (ESA/NASA) Launched Orbiting Sun at point in phase with Earth MANY NEW SURPRISES --> 1st comprehensive view of Sun