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The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This...

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The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars
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Page 1: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

The Sunand Comparison to Other Stars

Page 2: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Size

• The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 1015 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths inside the sun. Now this may seem big, but take a look at this…

Page 3: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

]

This is the sun next tomuch larger stars. In this scale,Jupiter would be approximately1 pixel!

That’s Jupiter!

Page 4: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.
Page 5: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.
Page 6: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Composition

HydrogenHeliumOther

The sun is made up of hydrogen, helium, and less than 1% of oxygen, carbon, neon, nitrogen, magnesium, iron, and silicon.

Page 7: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Composition of Other Stars

Every star that is formed in the Milky Way galaxy is made almost only of hydrogen and helium. On average,

71% of a stars’ mass is hydrogen, and 27% is helium. The other 2% is heavier

elements.

Page 8: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

A Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) Diagram is a chart

that shows both spectral class (color) and absolute

magnitude (actual brightness) of stars. Some,

like this one, also show temperature (Kelvin) and

luminosity (brightness compared to Sun).

Page 9: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

H-R Diagram with Stars Labeled

Page 10: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Absolute Magnitude‐Absolute magnitude is how bright an object would appear at 10

parsecs (1 astronomical unit) from the viewer.

‐The absolute magnitude of the Sun

is about 4.83.

‐Most stars have an absolute

magnitude between -10 and +17.

‐The closer the absolute magnitude to zero, the brighter the star.

Arcturus has the closest absolute magnitude to 0 known to man.

Page 11: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Apparent Magnitude‐Apparent magnitude is how bright an object is regardless of the distance from the viewer.‐The apparent magnitude of the Sun is about -26.74 as seen from Earth.‐Most stars have an apparent magnitude between -40 and +40.‐Vega was chosen to be the reference for all other stars,and was given an apparent magnitude of 0.

‐Sirius is the brightest star seen from Earth (except the sun).

Page 12: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Spectral Type (Classification)

Spectral type is simply the color of a star. The letters O, B, A, F, G, K and M each correspond to a color. O, B and A are blue, F is bluish-white, G is yellow, K is orange, and M is red. The Sun is a type G star. An easy way to remember these letters is as follows: “Oh, Be A Fine Girl, Kiss Me.”

O B A F G K M

Page 13: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Temperature

The surface temperature of the sun is about 5,800

K (10,000 degrees F). The core can reach over 15 million K (27,000,000

degrees F).

Page 14: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Surface Temperature of Other Stars

•Most stars are between 3,000 and 30,000 K (5,000°F and 54,000°F).•Blue hypergiants arethe hottest stars.•Brown dwarfs arethe coldest.•The sun is a G-type main sequence star, often improperly called a yellow dwarf because g-type stars are actually white.

Page 15: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

LuminosityLuminosity on an H-R D

Diagram is the brightness of an object compared to the sun

(Sun=1).

Page 16: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Solar Eclipse

A solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes between the sun and the moon. The moon blocks the light coming directly from the sun (umbra), and all that is visible is the light that surrounds the moon (penumbra).

Page 17: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

UltravioletThis is an ultraviolet picture of the sun. Ultraviolet cameras allow us to see the UV waves that the sun releases as they are otherwise invisible.

Page 18: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

SunspotsSunspots are spots on the sun caused by powerful magnetism. This magnetism causes cooling on a particular spot on the sun’s surface,

giving it a darker color.

Page 19: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Solar FlaresSolar flares are also caused by magnetic forces within the sun. When magnetic activity increases, eruptions occur, and the gases jump off of the surface, resulting in a flare of solar gases. These flares can be fairly small, or massive, as shown below….

Page 20: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.
Page 21: The Sun and Comparison to Other Stars. Size The volume of the sun is 3.38 x 10 15 cubic miles. This means it would be possible to fit 1,300,000 earths.

Stellar flares occur on stars. Scientists have detected a flare so large, that had it

occurred on the sun, a mass extinction would’ve occurred on Earth. This is an illustration of Swift, the telescope that

detected this massive solar flare.


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