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.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is the fate of our sun and other stars?
Advertisements

Chapter 10 Our Star A Closer Look at the Sun Our Goals for Learning Why does the Sun shine? What is the Sun’s structure?
Chapter 11: Our Star © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 10 Our Star 1.
The Sun – Describe characteristics of the Sun (S6C3PO2 high school)
Our Star, the Sun Chapter Eighteen.
Chapter 8 The Sun – Our Star.
Review Vocabulary magnetic field: the portion of space near a magnetic or current-carrying body where magnetic forces can be detected The Sun contains.
The Sun’s Structure & Features Chapter 26.1 Chapter % H 28% He The sun is made up of gas Temps: 15 million K at core / 5000 K at surface The sun.
ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy Our Star Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Radius: 6.9  10 8 m (109 times Earth) Mass: 2  kg (300,000 Earths) Luminosity: 3.8  watts Our Star.
The Sun Chapter 10.
This Set of Slides This set of slides covers our Sun, nuclear processes, solar flares, auroras, and more… Units covered 49, 50, 51.
Chapter 7 The Sun. Solar Prominence – photo by SOHO spacecraft from the Astronomy Picture of the Day site link.
Conversations with the Earth Tom Burbine
Youtube: Secrets of a Dynamic Sun The Sun – Our Star
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 AND STARS And anything I want to put in here.
Our Sun A medium sized star. Our Sun Our sun is a typical medium sized star. A star is a hot ball of plasma that shines because nuclear fusion is taking.
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.
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.
Chapter 9 The Sun. 9.4 The Active Sun Sunspots: appear dark because slightly cooler than surroundings:
Our Star, the Sun Chapter Eighteen. The Sun’s energy is generated by thermonuclear reactions in its core The energy released in a nuclear reaction corresponds.
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 gives off tremendous amounts of energy
OUR SUN THE CLOSEST STAR. Composition of the Sun The Sun is composed of at least 80 of the elements found on Earth. Sun is mostly composed of 91.2% Hydrogen,
The Sun 1 of 200 billion stars in the Milky Way. Our primary source of energy.
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.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. 1. The Sun appears bright orange because of the extremely hot fires that are constantly burning carbon. TRUE or FALSE 2.
I.The Solar Spectrum : Sun’s composition and surface temperature II.Sun’s Interior: Energy source, energy transport, structure, helioseismology. III.Sun’s.
Our Star, the Sun. The Sun is the Largest Object in the Solar System The Sun contains more than 99.85% of the total mass of the solar system If you.
THE SUN Energy from the sun, in the form of sunlight supports all life via photosynthesis, and drives the Earth’s climate and weather.
The Sun – Our Star Our sun is considered an “average” star and is one of the 100 BILLION stars that make up the Milky Way galaxy. But by no MEANS does.
Bellwork What two properties effect the force of gravity?
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our goals for learning:  Why was the Sun’s energy source a major mystery?  Why does the Sun shine?  What is the Sun’s.
Chapter 10 Our Star A Closer Look at the Sun Our goals for learning: Why does the Sun shine? What is the Sun’s structure?
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 Solar System. Nebula Theory (our solar system) The solar system started from the spinning and condensing of a cloud of dust and gas. The greatest.
Chapter 14 Our Star.
Lesson 2.  At the center of our solar system is the Sun which is a typical medium sized star.  Composed mainly of Hydrogen (73% by mass), 23% helium.
Units to cover: 52, 53, Observatories in Space.
Sun Notes. Characteristics CLOSEST star to earth CLOSEST star to earth The bright star in the center is Proxima Centauri.
A105 Stars and Galaxies  Homework 6 due today  Next Week: Rooftop Session on Oct. 11 at 9 PM  Reading: 54.4, 55, 56.1, 57.3, 58, 59 Today’s APODAPOD.
Sun, Moon, Earth, How do they work together to help life survive? our sun.
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.
The Sun. Properties M = 2 X kg = 300,000 M Earth R = 700,000 km > 100 R Earth 70% H, 28% He T = 5800 K surface, 15,000,000 K core.
I.The Solar Spectrum : Sun’s composition and surface temperature II.Sun’s Interior: Energy source, energy transport, structure, helioseismology. III.Sun’s.
Our Star, the Sun. The Sun is the Largest Object in the Solar System The Sun contains more than 99.85% of the total mass of the solar system If you.
Sun phenomena. sunspots By tracking them, we realized the sun rotates Click here.
The Sun The SUN Chapter 29 Chapter 29.
Chapter 29. Sec 1 Structure of the sun People believed the sun’s energy came from fire They believed the sun burned some type of fuel to produce energy.
Our amazing sun. sunspots By tracking them, we realized the sun rotates Click here.
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Sun.
OUR SUN.
Reading Unit 31, 32, 51.
The Sun and Our Earth The Structure of Our Sun The Energy of Our Sun
Sun Notes.
Fusion vs Fission Fission Fusion Division of an atom’s nucleus
What is the fate of our sun and other stars?
The Sun: Our Star.
The Sun.
The Sun and Our Earth The Structure of Our Sun The Energy of Our Sun
Do Now 12/9/09 What is the sun made of???
WHAT DO YOU THINK? How does the mass of the Sun compare with that of the rest of the Solar System? Are there stars nearer the Earth than the Sun is? What.
Brain Pop The Sun
The Centre of the Solar System Earth Science 11
The sun gives off tremendous amounts of energy
The Sun – Our Favorite Star
Journey of solar energy from core to surface takes hundreds of thousands of years Radiative zone: photons constantly collide with electrons, get thrown.
Presentation transcript:

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 equivalent of 100 billion atomic bombs every second! Exists thanks to a delicate balance of gravity and pressure

A delicate balance… The immense mass of the Sun generates a huge gravitational force –Gravity pulls all of the Sun ’ s matter toward its center –This crushing force produces a high temperature and pressure on the interior of the Sun This balance of gravity and pressure will allow a star like the sun to live for billions of years

The Solar Interior

The Photosphere The photosphere is the visible “ surface ” of our star –Not really a surface, as the Sun is gaseous throughout –Photosphere is only 500 km thick –Average temperature is 5780 K

Energy Transport in the Sun Just below the photosphere is the convection zone. –Energy is transported from deeper in the Sun by convection, in patterns similar to those found in a pot of boiling water (hot gas rises, dumps its energy into the photosphere, and then sinks) Energy in the convection zone comes from the radiative zone. –Energy from the core is transported outward by radiation – the transfer of photons. –Takes more than 100,000 years for a single photon to escape the Sun!

The Solar Atmosphere Regions of the Sun above the photosphere are called the Sun ’ s atmosphere Just above the photosphere lies the chromosphere –Usually invisible, but can be seen during eclipses –Spicules, found here, look like a prairie grass fire! Above the chromosphere is the corona –Extremely high temperatures (more than 1 million K!) –Rapidly expanding gas forms the solar wind.

A Very Active Star The surface and atmosphere of the Sun are extremely active Solar wind streams out of coronal holes, regions of low magnetic field Active regions send arcades of plasma shooting from the surface. These are regions of high magnetic field Coronal mass ejections send large quantities of mass out into space Solar flares release energy into space

The Ideal Gas Law Pressure = Constant  Temperature  Density

The Solar Thermostat Stars like the Sun can be seen as having a kind of thermostat –Gravity pulls inward, pressure pushes outward. –If temperature begins to fall, pressure decreases and gravity pulls more mass toward the center –This inward-falling mass increases the temperature and pressure, restoring balance!

How do we know all of this? Naturally, we ’ ve never seen the inside of the Sun –Computer models suggest the layered structure we ’ ve discussed –We can probe the interior using helioseismology, the study of sunquakes!

Sunspots Sunspots are highly localized cool regions in the photosphere of the Sun –Discovered by Galileo –Can be many times larger than the Earth! –They contain intense magnetic fields, as evidenced by the Zeeman effect

A Sunspot’s Magnetic Field The intense magnetic fields found in sunspots suppress particle motion Solar ions cannot leave these regions of high magnetic field, and the field lines are “ frozen ” to the plasma This trapped plasma keeps hot material from surfacing below the sunspot, keeping it cool.

Prominences Fields have their “ footpoints ” in sunspots in the photosphere These loops are relatively unstable, and can release vast quantities of plasma into space very quickly Prominences are large loops of glowing solar plasma, trapped by magnetic fields –Coronal Mass Ejections

Solar Flares Solar flares are huge eruptions of hot gas and radiation in the photosphere Can damage satellites, spacecraft, and humans in space The study of coronal mass ejections and solar flares is called “ space weather ”

A Coronal Mass Ejection

The Aurora When CME material reaches the Earth, it interacts with the Earth ’ s magnetic field and collides with ionospheric particles The collision excites ionospheric oxygen, which causes it to emit a photon We see these emitted photons as the aurora, or Northern Lights

The Solar Cycle The number of sunspots seen increases and decreases periodically. Every 11 years or so, the sunspot number peaks. This is called Solar Maximum Around 5.5 years after Solar Maximum, the sunspot number is at its lowest level. This is called Solar Minimum Solar activity (CMEs, flares, etc.) peaks with the sunspot number

The Babcock Cycle

Differential Rotation Different parts of the sun rotate at different speeds –Equator rotates faster than the poles –Solar magnetic fields get twisted as time goes on

The Maunder Minimum Very few sunspots were recorded between 1645 and 1725 This is called the Maunder Minimum Corresponds to relatively lower temperatures here on Earth, a “ little ice age ” The reason for the Maunder Minimum and its effect on climate are still unknown