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- Today: Feedback Questionnaires
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Chapter 7 -- The Sun
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- O B A F G K M scheme
- Originally in order of H strength – A,B,etc Above order is for
decreasing temperature
- Standard mnemonic: Oh, Be A
Fine Girl (Guy), Kiss Me
- Use numbers for finer divisions:
A0, A1, ... A9, F0, F1, ... F9, G0, G1, ...
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- Radius: R = 6.96 ´ 105 km (q=diameter/distance)
- Mass: M = 1.99 ´ 1030 kg
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- Surface Temperature 5800 K (from lmax or spectral type)
- Not all that hot by laboratory standards
- Central Temperature 15 ´ 106 K (explained later)
- Central temperature IS very high
- Luminosity (L) 3.8 ´ 1026 J/s ( L = sT4surface
´ 4 p R2sun)
( L = Fat Earth ´ 4 p R21 AU)
- Will be important for understanding energy generation in Sun
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- At these T’s, r’s, hydrogen will be a gas
- At high enough T, as pressure (P) increases and r increases,
you never really get a “liquid”, just a very dense
gas.
- H ionization?
- On outside, H mostly neutral
(a small fraction is ionized)
- remember H ionized and Balmer lines gone only above 10,000 K
- Over most of interior, H completely ionized
- separate electrons (e-) and protons (p+)
- Ionized gas called a “plasma”
- No discrete “surface” – just increasing r, T, P, and
“opacity”
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- From theory:
- Pressure (P) and density (r) must increase with depth
- Weight of overlying gas compresses lower material --
“Hydrostatic equilibrium”
- Temperature (T) must increase with depth
- Energy is flowing out of the sun – and it flows from hot to cold
-- so hot inside
- Numerical modeling of details let us calculate T(r), r(r), P(r)
- From observations of “oscillations” or “solar
seismology”
- The sun oscillates like a bell (or the air in an organ pipe)
- The frequency depends upon sound speed, and that depends upon T(r), r(r), P(r)
- Observations from the “Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG)
telescopes.
- From interpreting the spectrum using Kirchoff’s laws
- In general the spectrum of the Sun looks like continuous emission
- This must come from a solid – or a very dense gas
- We see many dark absorption lines in the solar spectrum
- This must come from cooler gas between us and the hot dense gas
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- No discrete “surface” – just increase r, T, P, and
“opacity”
- “Surface” or photosphere defined by depth from which
visible photons can escape.
- This would also be depth to which visible photons could penetrate if
photons were somehow directed back into the sun.
- Opacity depends on wavelength, so apparent “surface” will be
at different depths for different wavelengths
- High opacity in absorption lines because these photons easily
absorbed/emitted
- Won’t see very far in at these wavelengths.
- Low opacity in between absorption lines
- Can see in deeper at these wavelengths.
- Eventually r so high gas opaque at all wavelengths (just as
in solid)
- “surface” high = cool = dark in lines; deep = hot = bright between
lines
- This gives us way to “probe” to different depths in sun
- Same technique used by satellites to “probe” temperatures
in Earth’s atmosphere
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- We see emission lines at some wavelengths:
- Implies very THIN HOT overlying gas at top of atmosphere
- Gas is so thin it has trouble radiating heat away
- Sound waves or magnetic fields heat thin gas
- Chromosphere (“colored region” glows at a few
wavelengths )
- Corona (“crown” seen during solar eclipses )
- Solar Wind ( escaping wind of tenuous gas
)
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- CONVECTION:
- Granulation and Supergranulation
- Heat carried by actual motion of gas
- Different than radiative transport
- energy carried by photons
- dominates deeper in sun
- SUNSPOTS
- Darker (and cooler) regions of sun
- Strong magnetic fields limit convection
- Come and go in 11 (really 22) year cycle
- Magnetic energy releases cause “flares”
- Material ejected causes aurora
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