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The Sun

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Page 1: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The Sun

Page 2: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

General details about the Sun

• Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min)

• A second generation star with composition– 73.4% Hydrogen

– 25% Helium

– 1.6% Heavier Elements (Iron etc..)

• Heavier elements are not produced in big bang but have been produced in a large red-giant star

Page 3: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Sun Specifications

• Mass – 1.99 x 1030 kgm• Volume – 1.3 million times the Earth’s volume• Diameter – 1,392,000 km (109 times Earth diameter)• Surface Temperature – 5,500 Kelvin (mean)• Gravity – 280 ms-2 (about 28 times Earth’s gravity)• Light takes around 8 minutes to reach Earth from the

Sun

Page 4: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Structure of the Sun

Page 5: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Structure of the Sun – Zone 1• Mostly hot and highly ionised plasma• Core (Zone 1) - Inner most layer where Nuclear

Fusion reaction of Hydrogen to Helium occurs.

Page 6: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Structure of the Sun – Zones 2 to 3• Radiative Zone 2 – Electromagnetic energy transmitted slowly through this layer• Interface Zone – Thin layer that generates Sun’s Magnetic Field• Convection Zone 3 – Region where energy is transmitted to the surface by

convection currents

• Note: It takes millions of years for the heat to reach the surface !

Page 7: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Atmospheric structure of the Sun

• The visible surface of the Sun is called the Photosphere. It emits visible light, infra red and UV radiation

Page 8: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Atmospheric structure of the Sun

• The lower atmosphere is called the Chromosphere which is about 100,000 km thick.

• The Chromosphere contains ‘spike like’ prominences, called spicules, that rise like geysers carrying magnetic fields.

Page 9: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Spicules

Page 10: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Solar ProminencesA large looping curtain of gas

Page 11: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Corona

• The Corona is the outer atmosphere of the Sun. here radio waves and x-rays are emitted. The Corona can reach temperatures of 1,000,000 degrees Kelvin.

• The Corona can extend many millions of kilometres into space.

Page 12: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Sunspots

• Sunspots are associated with magnetic storms. They are regions of intense magnetic activity.

• They appear as dark spots because they are cooler than the surrounding surface. The temperature of sunspots is about 3800 Kelvin.

Page 13: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Sunspots – produced by the rotating Sun stretching the magnetic field lines

Page 14: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Solar flares

• Solar flares are sudden explosive outbursts of radiation and matter near sunspots.

• Both sunspots and solar flares cause massive disruption to radio communications.

Page 15: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Sunspots and Solar flares

Page 16: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Sun’s Corona

Page 17: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Sunspots

Page 18: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Solar flare

Page 19: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Emissions from the Sun

• Electromagnetic Radiation– Produces a range of radiations from short-

wavelength gamma to long radio.– However, visible spectrum is most intense

wavelength (peak at 460 nanometres).– The visible and infra-red closely matches

theoretical radiation curve of ‘black body’ at a temperature of 6000 Kelvin.

Page 20: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Emissions from the Sun

• Solar Wind & Interplanetary Magnetic Field– Difference in pressure between corona and

interplanetary space causes outflow of material from corona. This is the solar wind.

– Speeds of 400–500 kms-1 and takes 3 to 4 days to reach Earth.

– Near Earth has density of 5 protons and 5 electrons per cm3.

– Velocity of particles results in temperature of 10,000 to 100,000 Kelvin.

Page 21: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Solar Wind & Interplanetary Magnetic Field

• In the photosphere a magnetic ‘coupling’ occurs between magnetic field belonging to plasma of solar wind and Sun’s magnetic field.

• This results in Sun’s magnetic field lines becoming locked into the plasma.

Page 22: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Solar Wind & Interplanetary Magnetic Field

• The out flowing solar wind thus carries the magnetic field lines with it.

• As the Sun rotates it winds the field lines into a giant spiral – as shown opposite.

• At the Earth the field lines are approximately 45 degrees to the direction of the Sun.

Page 23: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The Solar Cycle

• Sun experiences a cyclic pattern of turbulent activity (about every 11 years).

• Period of peak activity is solar maximum while period of least activity is solar minimum.

• The solar cycle is an 11 year cyclical pattern of increasing and decreasing frequency of:– Sunspots– Solar flares– Prominences– Coronal mass ejections

Page 24: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with
Page 25: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The Sunspot Cycle

• Easiest way to observe the solar activity is to look at sunspot activity.

• The sunspot cycle is a cyclical pattern of increasing and decreasing number of sunspots.

• At solar maximum there is usually over 100 sunspots appearing simultaneously on the Sun’s surface.

• At solar minimum there may be no sunspots.• The sunspot cycle on average is 11 years (but can

vary between 7 and 13 years).

Page 26: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The cyclic nature of sunspot activity

Page 27: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Radiocarbon levels in tree rings and sunspot activity !!

Page 28: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

Sunspot activity and solar latitude

• Appearance of sunspots changes in solar latitude during a sunspot cycle. They start at around 40 degree latitude and end at around the Sun’s equator.

Page 29: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The Sun-Earth Connection - Electromagnetic radiation

• The Sun emits a wide range of electromagnetic radiation.

• In the Earth’s atmospheric different wavelengths of radiation get absorbed by different molecules.

Page 30: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The Sun-Earth Connection - The Solar Wind

• The solar wind carrying the interplanetary magnetic field interacts with the Earth’s magnetic field.

• Most of the wind flows around and past the Earth distorting the Earths magnetic field to create a ‘tail’ shape.

• The magnetosphere is the region surrounding a planet that contains its distorted magnetic field.

Page 31: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The magnetosphere of the Earth

Page 32: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The Van Allen Belts• The Van Allen Belts are two zones of radiation (ions) that

wrap around the Earth. They are a result of ions from the solar wind been captured by the Earth’s magnetic field lines.

Page 33: The Sun. General details about the Sun Nearest star to Earth at distance of 152,100,000 km (max) to 147,100,000 km (min) A second generation star with

The Auroras