1 / 31

Week 6

Week 6. Reading: Chapter 9, Sections 1, 4, 5a (10 pages) Chapter 10, Sections 3, 5 (6 pages) Chapter 12, Sections 1-3 (10 pages). The Sun Stellar Evolution: Low Mass Stars White Dwarfs. The Sun. 93,000,000 miles from Earth. The Sun’s Outer Layers.

Download Presentation

Week 6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Week 6 Reading: Chapter 9, Sections 1, 4, 5a (10 pages) Chapter 10, Sections 3, 5 (6 pages) Chapter 12, Sections 1-3 (10 pages) The Sun Stellar Evolution: Low Mass Stars White Dwarfs

  2. The Sun 93,000,000 miles from Earth

  3. The Sun’s Outer Layers • Photosphere – visible “surface” of the sun • Chromosphere – layer just above photosphere. Sort of the “lower” atmosphere. • Corona – above the chromosphere. Sort of a hot “upper” atmosphere.

  4. The visible top layer of the convection zone is granulated, with areas of upwelling material surrounded by areas of sinking material:

  5. The Corona • The Sun’s hot “upper” atmosphere • Extremely hot (~1-2 million K) – opposite of what you would expect • Very low density, highly ionized gas • Some coronal gas is moving so fast that it escapes the pull of gravity of the Sun and escapes as the solar wind.

  6. The Solar Corona Solar corona can be seen during eclipse if both photosphere and chromosphere are blocked:

  7. Sun Size Tutorial

  8. The Sun is not static.

  9. Quiet Sun vs. Active Sun Quiet Sun Active Sun

  10. Sunspots Dark “blotches” on the “surface” (photosphere) of the Sun Umbra Penumbra

  11. Sunspots Sunspots come and go, typically in a few days. Sunspots are linked by pairs of magnetic field lines:

  12. Sunspots and Magnetic Fields The rotation of the Sun drags magnetic field lines around with it, causing kinks

  13. The Sunspot Cycle The number of sunspots varies with time. 11 year cycle from one max to the next. Last max 2000 Coming out of minimum right now (2008)

  14. The Sunspot Cycle Sunspots “live” closer to the equator later in the cycle; farther from the equator early in the cycle. Sunspot location (latitude) vs. time

  15. The Solar Cycle The Sun has an 11-year sunspot cycle, during which sunspot numbers rise, fall, and then rise again:

  16. Sunspots and Magnetic Fields • Sunspots are caused by the Sun’s magnetic field • Sunspots occur where the Sun’s magnetic field breaks through the “surface” of the Sun • The magnetic field prevent hot, ionized material from rising • Dark sunspots result

  17. The Solar Cycle The Sun’s magnetic field is responsible for the sunspot cycle. This 11 year cycle is just half of a 22 year solar cycle. The north magnetic pole becomes the south magnetic pole after 11 years. After 11 more, it is back to being the north magnetic pole again.

  18. Prominences and Filaments Prominences are filaments seen edge on.

  19. Solar Flares Solar flares – eruptions in the Sun’s atmosphere that cause energetic particles to escape from the Sun. Not the same as the solar wind, which is continuous Probably related to filaments/prominences. Flares simply escape instead of falling back down.

  20. Solar Flares A solar flare is a large explosion on Sun’s surface, emitting a similar amount of energy to a prominence, but in seconds or minutes rather than days or weeks:

  21. Solar Flares Movie

  22. X-ray Movie of the Corona

  23. Coronal Mass Ejection A coronal mass ejection emits charged particles that can affect the Earth:

  24. CME

  25. Solar Forecast 3-day Solar-Geophysical Forecast issued Oct 1 at 22:00 UTC Solar Activity Forecast: Solar activity is expected to remain at moderate to high levels. Isolated M-class flares are probable. The is also a chance for a major flare from Region 9632 (S21W73) as it begins to exit the disk. Geophysical Activity Forecast: The geomagnetic field activity is expected to be at unsettled to minor storm levels for the next two days due to CME effects. Mostly unsettled conditions are expected on the final day of forecast. The greater than 10 MeV proton event is expected to continue through most of the forecast period.

  26. Universe Video Ch 3. – Sunspots and magnetic fields Skip to 16:55 Flares Ch 4 – CMEs – 27:50 Ch 5 – 34:11 11 year cycle 35:40 Ch 6 – start to 38:48

  27. How Do Stars Shine? Stars shine by nuclear fusion: the process of extracting energy from the fusion of lighter elements into heavier elements. The main fusion process is the conversion of 4 Hydrogen atoms into 1 Helium atom. However, one Helium atom is slightly less massive than the 4 Hydrogen atoms combined.

  28. Nuclear Fusion The “extra” mass is converted into energy according to Einstein’s famous formula: E = mc2 The amount of energy created per Helium atom is small, but there is a LOT of Hydrogen in stars. Fusing Hydrogen into Helium requires temperatures greater than 15 million degrees Kelvin. The pressure at the core of Main Sequence stars causes the core to heat up to over this temperature.

  29. Hydrostatic Equilibrium Fusion keeps stars from collapsing under their own weight. Pressure from the outflowing hot gas balances the pressure of gravity. This process is called hydrostatic equilibrium

  30. TMBG

More Related