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The Sun

Date post: 17-Mar-2016
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The Sun. Discussion. What does it mean to say the Sun is in hydrostatic equilibrium?. Discussion. What does it mean to say the Sun is in thermal equilibrium?. Discussion. How does the Sun maintain hydrostatic and thermal equilibrium?. Discussion. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Sun
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Page 1: The Sun

The Sun

Page 2: The Sun

Discussion

What does it mean to say the Sun is in hydrostatic equilibrium?

Page 3: The Sun

Discussion

What does it mean to say the Sun is in thermal equilibrium?

Page 4: The Sun

Discussion

How does the Sun maintain hydrostatic and thermal equilibrium?

Page 5: The Sun

Discussion

What happens if all fusion in the Sun suddenly ceases?

Page 6: The Sun

Discussion

If the Sun contracts, it heats up. Why doesn’t the increased pressure stop the contraction?

Page 7: The Sun

Discussion

If the Sun is in thermal equilibrium and it is generating heat in its core via thermonuclear fusion, what must happen to that energy?

Page 8: The Sun

Heat Transport in the Sun

• Conduction – particles transfer energy via collisions

• Convection – energy transferred by movement of material from hotter to cooler regions

• Radiative Diffusion – energy transferred via photons

Page 9: The Sun

Discussion

Which would you rather do, put your hand in an oven at 450 degrees F or put you hand on a 450 degree F stove top? Why is there a difference?

Page 10: The Sun

Radiative Diffusion

Radiative zone – inner 71 percent of the Sun’s Interior where all atoms are ionized.

Takes a photon 170,000 years to reach the convective zone. Each time a photon is absorbed it loses energy.

Page 11: The Sun
Page 12: The Sun

Convection

Convective Zone – outer 29 percent of Sun’s interior. Bottom of convective zone is cool enough for heavy atoms to regain electrons and absorb light.

Page 13: The Sun

Discussion

What happens to the bottom layer of the convection zone as it absorbs light from the radiative zone.

Page 14: The Sun

Solar Granulation

Page 15: The Sun
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Differential Rotation causes Sun’s magnetic field

Sun is made of gas. Thus it does not all have to rotate at the same rate!

The equator of the Sun rotates faster than the poles. Sidereal rotation period at equator is about 25 days, while at the poles the sidereal rotation rate is about 35 days.

Page 19: The Sun

The Radiative Zone rotates as a solid body!

However, the radiative zone rotates with a sidereal period of 27 days at all latitudes.

Only the convection zone rotates differentially.

Page 20: The Sun
Page 21: The Sun

Discussion

How do you think we know the rotation rate of the radiative zone when we can only observe the photosphere?

Page 22: The Sun

Discussion

Differential rotation creates a tremendous amount of shear as one layer slides past the other. A similar thing happens in Earth’s atmosphere when a cold air mass meets a warm air mass.

What is the result in Earth’s atmosphere?

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Prominence

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Flare

Page 27: The Sun

Coronal mass ejections

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The Sun-Earth connection

Coronal mass ejections and solar flares can be directed at Earth. Luckily for us, Earth has a magnetic field and an atmosphere to protect us.

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Page 32: The Sun
Page 33: The Sun

Aurora

When high speed particles from the Sun collide with atoms in Earth’s upper atmosphere. The electrons are knocked into higher energy orbitals and emit light when returning to the ground state.

Page 34: The Sun
Page 35: The Sun

Discussion

Are stars without a convection zone likely to have starspots, prominences and flares? Explain.

Page 36: The Sun
Page 37: The Sun

Discussion

As the Sun converts 4 protons, into 1 He nucleus, what happens to the Sun’s core?

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Page 39: The Sun

Discussion

What will happen to the Earth as the Sun’s luminosity increases?

Page 40: The Sun

Discussion

As the Sun becomes more luminous, what happens to the habitable zone?

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Page 42: The Sun

Discussion

What happens to the core when the Sun fuses all of its Hydrogen in the core into helium?

Page 43: The Sun

Discussion

What happens to the hydrogen that was just outside the core but never hot enough to fuse into helium?

Page 44: The Sun

Discussion

The fusion of H into He around the Sun’s core produces a lot of heat and pressure. Can this stop the contraction of the core? What effect does this extra pressure have on the outer layers of the Sun?

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Page 46: The Sun
Page 47: The Sun

Discussion

Do you think stellar winds will be stronger, less than, or about the same in red giant stars as in main sequence stars? Explain.

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Page 49: The Sun
Page 50: The Sun

Triple alpha process

As long as more He is dumped on the core it continues to contract, to heat up and the star’s outer layers continue to expand.

Eventually, the core reaches a temperature of 100 million K and 3 He atoms can fuse into a carbon atom.

Page 51: The Sun
Page 52: The Sun

Discussion

Why do you think a higher temperature 100 million K is required to fuse helium into carbon than the 10 million K required for the proton-proton chain?

Page 53: The Sun

Discussion

What happens when the Sun runs out of He in its core?

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Ring nebula

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Abell 39

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Owl nebula

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Saturn nebula

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Cat’s Eye nebula

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Spirograph nebula

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NGC 7027

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Stingray nebula

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NGC 6543

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MyCn 18

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Page 68: The Sun

Discussion

A solar mass star leaves behind a white dwarf that contains nearly pure carbon. While matter in the interior is degenerate, there is a layer of normal matter on the surface. What does this layer become once the surface cools to room temperature?


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