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Stars and the Sun. Chapter 18.2. Objectives. Describe the basic structure and properties of stars Explain how the composition and surface temperatures of stars are measured Recognize that all normal stars are powered by fusion reactions that form elements Discuss the evolution of stars.
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Stars and the Sun Chapter 18.2
Objectives • Describe the basic structure and properties of stars • Explain how the composition and surface temperatures of stars are measured • Recognize that all normal stars are powered by fusion reactions that form elements • Discuss the evolution of stars
Vocabulary • Constellation • Red star • White dwarf • Supergiant • Supernova • Neutron star • Black hole
Objective 1: The Structure of the Sun • Stars are huge balls of mostly hydrogen and helium • Held together by gravity • Inside the core there is enormous pressure • Stars are driven by Fusion
Fusion • Hydrogen is fused into helium, which releases energy
The sun’s external temperature • 5500 Celcius • Gives off WHITE light • It appears yellow in our sky because our atmosphere scatters the violet and blue light, leaving yellow • The scattered light gives us our blue sky • When the sun is low, at sunset, more blue is scattered and the sun can look orange
Heavy Metals • Our solar system contains many heavy metals • Since these form when stars explode – our solar system must have been formed from the star dust of exploding stars
1 Core 2 Radiative zone 3 Convective zone 4 Photosphere 5 Chromosphere 6 Corona 7 Sunspot 8 Granules 9 Prominence
The Core • The sun is Plasma not gas • Where most Fusion takes place • All of the sun’s energy comes from the core
Radiation and Convection Zones • Remember how heat moves? • Radiation the energy is absorbed and re radiated out from the next particles • In the Radiation zone – Energy moves slowly • Between the Radiation zone and the Convection zone is the Tachocline • a shear zone, the convection zone has fast moving currents • may be responsible for the formation of the magnetic field
Convection Zone • In Convection there are currents that help the energy flow outward • Each current flows heat up, cools and sinks back down • Forms magnetic regions all over the sun • The Granules are visible turbulence from these flows • It takes 10,000 to 170,000 years for energy to travel from the core to the surface (scientific estimates)
Photosphere • The visible surface of the sun • Temperature at the surface is 6000 Celcius • It is not as dense as air on earth
Everything above the photosphere is the atmosphere of the sun There are 5 zones • Temperature minimum • Chromosphere • Transition • Corona • heliosphere
Temperature Minimum • Coolest place in the sun is between the Photosphere and the Chromosphere • 4000 Celcius • It is unknown why it is cooler
Chromosphere • Named from the visible colors • Appears as a bright flash before an eclipse • Temperature increases to20,000 C
Transition • Below transition gravity forms sun • Above transition gravity is less dominant • Temperature rises – Helium is ionized and holds heat
Corona • During a solar eclipse, the corona can be seen with the naked eye
Corona • Can extend past earth • Temperatures can reach 1 to 3 million Celcius • Scientists don’t know why • One reason may be magnetic reconnection – a process that releases energy stored in magnetic fields
Heliosphere • Extends thru the solar system • Includes the solar wind and the suns magnetic field • In 2004 the Voyager space probe encountered a shock wave believed to be part of the heliosphere, it was 50 AU away from the sun
Sunspots • Areas of the sun that appear darker because they are cooler • They are cooler because they have strong magnetic fields – magnetic fields decrease surrounding pressure and don’t let hot gases flow • Most sunspots are the size of the earth • Can be seen with filters
Effect of sun spots on earth • More sun spots – correlate to higher earth temperatures • Fewer sunspots – cooler temperatures • In 1645-1715 sunspots disappeared and there was a mini ice age • Sunspots increase activity of Northern Lights
Solar Cycle • Sunspots increase and decrease every 11 years • Last peak May 2000 • We are heading back into a peak of sunspot activity in 2011 – It’s time to take a trip to Alaska!
Granules • It’s kind of like looking at the surface of a boiling pot of spaghetti sauce – the bubbling • Top of convection columns in the sun, they surface in the photosphere
What’s the difference • A prominence is something sticking out – they are often shaped like loops • They follow the magnetic field lines • Can be stable for days or months • Solar Flares are explosions under the surface of the sun – the blow clouds of gas out into space • Much larger events
Prominance • Sun quake caused by solar flare
Looking at the sun • Brief periods don’t cause damage – more likely to for young people or at high elevation • UV Exposure believed to contribute to Cataracts (not from looking directly at sun) • Looking thru binoculars can damage eyes (concentrated) • Looking at Partial eclipses without filters is dangerous – the eye’s pupil doesn’t contract as much as it should
Objective 2: Explain how composition and surface temperatures of stars are measured • Otherwise known as how do we know all this? • Cameras, telescopes, filters to detect… • visible light, radio waves, electromagnetic radiation… • Spectroscopy • Can determine temperature, age, rotation, magnetic field and movement towards or away from us
Spectroscopy • Study light • Split light into wavelengths • Each element has a spectral pattern it’s like a fingerprint for Hydrogen and Helium • The red shift that shows us the Universe is expanding is seen because the fingerprint isn’t exactly where it is supposed to be
Young Stars contain more elements • Stars are mostly hydrogen and helium • Each element contains a spectral pattern • Our Sun is middle aged
Temperature seen with color • Again – we look at the spectral patterns • Blue suns are hotter – 220,000 C • Red suns are cooler – 17,600 C • Our Yellow sun – 55,000 C
Rotation • Rotation is seen in smudges in the spectral pattern
Redshift The boxes show redshifted Galaxies
Objective 3: Fusion • The core of stars is extremely hot and dense – gravity squishes it together • In these conditions - Stars convert hydrogen to helium • As stars age, the run out of hydrogen and begin making carbon, oxygen, nitrogen… • Older stars can produce elements as heavy as lead
Objective 4: Evolution of Stars • Stars are born from massive gas clouds that coalesce from gravity • When the pressure and temperature get high enough – fusion starts and the star starts to shine
What happens when the hydrogen runs out? • When stars run out of hydrogen, the core collapses while the outer edge expands (it cools) • The collapse lets the sun start fusing helium into heavier elements • When our sun becomes a red giant it will swallow up earth – it’s diameter will reach mars
Planetary Nebula • When the red giant has nothing left to fuse it releases the outer layers into space • What’s left becomes a White Dwarf • White Dwarfs are as small as a planet but very dense • They eventually Burn out
What happens to bigger stars? Up to 40 times our sun Even Bigger You get the same supernova The final collapse creates a Black Hole • When the star burns it’s hydrogen it collapses very quickly • Produces a shock wave and very bright light • A Supernova • The final collapse of a supernova creates a Neutron Star
What path will our sun take?What path will other stars take?
Interaction of White Dwarf and Black Hole • This is a computer simulation – scientists would like to find this happening out there
What happens after stars die? • New stars form from Stardust • We are stardust • (better described as NUCLEAR WASTE)