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Chapter 9 The Sun Sunspots Our Sun • Is the nearest star • 8 light minutes away • Next nearest star is 4.3 light-years away (300,000X further than sun) Figure 9.1 The Sun Table 9.1 Some Solar Properties Solar Rotation • • • • • Differential rotation Measure by timing sunspots Faster at equator Slower at poles X-ray and visible light movie of sun Figure 9.2 Solar Structure Solar Structure • • • • • • • • Core Radiation zone Convection zone Photosphere (“surface” we see) Chromosphere Transition zone Corona Solar wind Solar Luminosity • Solar constant 1400 W/m2 above earth’s atmosphere • 1000 W/m2 at earth’s surface • Solar constant and distance to sun gives luminosity of about 4 X 1026 W Figure 9.3 Solar Luminosity Stellar balance • Outward pressure of hot gas • Inward pull of gravity • Balanced at every point in a star Figure 9.4 Stellar Balance Standard solar model • • • • Mathematical and physical model of sun Based on observations and physical laws Predicts density and temperature Helioseismology allows knowledge of interior structure Figure 9.5 Solar Oscillations Figure 9.6 Solar Interior Sun’s temperature and density • • • • Core density 150,000 kg/m3 (20X iron) Core temperature 15 million K Core is a gas (plasma) Photosphere is 0.0001X density of earth’s atmosphere • Photosphere temperature 5780 K Discovery 9.1 SOHO: Eavesdropping on the Sun SOHO • Solar and Heliospheric Observatory • European Space Agency Solar energy transport • Near core - very hot • Gas is completely ionized (plasma) • No photons captured - transparent to radiation • Outer edge of radiation zone cool enough for electrons to re-combine with nuclei • Photons all absorbed Convection Zone • Energy transported by rising hot gases • Cooler gas sinks • Convection cells vary in size with depth in convection zone • Tens of thousands of km to a thousand km convection cells • Photons from photosphere escape into space Figure 9.7 Solar Convection Evidence for convection • • • • • • Solar granulation of photosphere Granules size of a large US state Last 5 to 10 minutes Bright regions - hot gas rising Dark regions - cool gas sinking 500 K difference between hot and cool Figure 9.8 Solar Granulation Solar Granulation movie • Near infrared • 60 minute sequence sped up • At http://www.bbso.njit.edu or click here Doppler shift • Bright granules move up at about 1 km/s • Dark granules move down at about 1 km/s Supergranulation • Larger scale flow beneath solar surface • 30,000 km across Figure 9.9 Solar Spectrum Composition of solar atmosphere • Primarily H and He • Also O, C, N, Si, Mg, Ne, Fe, S • Similar to Jovian planets and rest of universe Table 9.2 The Composition of the Sun Figure 9.10 Solar Chromosphere Solar chromosphere • • • • • Above photosphere and less dense Pinkish hue from H emission Expelling jets of hot matter - spicules Last minutes 100 km/s Figure 9.11 Solar Spicules Corona • Corona visible during total solar eclipse • Emission spectrum visible against blackness of space • Ionized atoms - high coronal temperatures Figure 9.12 Solar Corona Transition Zone • Minimum temperature of 4500 K in chromosphere • Temperature climbs through transition zone • Reaches several million K in corona Figure 9.13 Solar Atmospheric Temperature Solar wind • • • • Starts 10 million km above photosphere Hot coronal gas escapes sun’s gravity Millions of tons of sun ejected each second Only lost 0.1% of mass in 4.6 billion years X-rays in corona • • • • • Photosphere emits primarily visible light Hotter corona emits primarily X-rays Coronal holes - visible in X-rays Solar wind escapes in coronal holes Related to magnetic fields Figure 9.14 Sunspots Figure 9.15 Sunspots, Up Close Sunspots • • • • • In photosphere Cooler (darker) than surrounding material Dark umbra (4500 K) Grayish penumbra (5500 K) Typically 10,000 km across (size of earth) Sunspot magnetism • Magnetic field of photosphere stronger than earth’s • Magnetic field in sunspots is 1000X greater than surrounding photosphere • Field lines perpendicular to surface • Strong fields interfere with convective flow • Causes sunspots to be cooler Sunspot magnetic polarity • Sunspots in pairs at same latitude • Pair members have opposite polarity N&S • Leading spot in a hemisphere always has same polarity • Leading spot in other hemisphere has opposite polarity Figure 9.16 Sunspot Magnetism Magnetic field wrapping • • • • • • Differential rotation “wraps” magnetic field North-south re-oriented to east-west Convection lifts field to surface Twisting and tangling results Some kinks rise out of photosphere Forms sunspot pair Figure 9.17 Solar Rotation Analogy 9.1 A tangled garden hose Figure 9.18 Sunspot Cycle Maunder minimum • • • • Cycle varies from 7 to 15 years Overall activity varies Solar inactivity from 1645-1715 Maunder minimum caused “Little Ice Age” Figure 9.19 Maunder Minimum Solar prominences • Loops or sheets of gas ejected into lower corona • Maybe due to magnetic fields near sunspots • Typically 100,000 km (10X diameter of earth) Figure 9.20 Solar Prominences Solar prominence movie • Big Bear Solar Observatory • At http://www.bbso.njit.edu or click here Solar flares • • • • More violent than prominences Sweeps across active region in minutes Temperature of millions of K Material blasted into space Figure 9.21 Solar Flare Solar flare movie • Big Bear Solar Observatory • Go to http://www.bbso.njit.edu or click here Corona activity • Coronal mass ejection • Several times per day during sunspot maximum • Can cause communication and power disruption on earth Figure 9.22 Coronal Mass Ejection Figure 9.23 Coronal Hole Figure 9.24 Active Corona SOHO Coronal mass ejection • White ring is size of sun • Play movie or go to • http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/LA TEST/current_c2.mpg Sun’s energy source • Nuclear fusion reactions in core • Two nuclei combine forming 3rd nucleus plus energy • 3rd nucleus has less mass than sum of two nuclei • Mass converted to energy E = mc2 • Need high temperature to overcome charge repulsion Figure 9.25 Proton Interactions Proton-Proton chain • 4 protons helium-4 + 2 neutrinos + energy • Neutrino is chargeless and virtually massless particle • Neutrinos easily pass through sun Figure 9.26 Solar Fusion Energy generated • • • • 600 million tons of H fused into He every s Sun can sustain this another 5 billion years Energy produced in core as gamma rays Neutrinos also carry off energy Figure 9.27a Neutrino Telescope in Japan Figure 9.27b Neutrino Telescope in Ontario, Canada Neutrinos • Less neutrinos detected at earth than predicted by standard solar model • Neutrinos oscillate into new types during journey to earth • Latest neutrino detectors can find all types More Precisely 9.2 Energy Generation in the Proton–Proton Chain