Philips Atlas of the Universe

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Our Star: the Sun


ATLAS OF THE UNIVERSE


B


ecause the Sun appears so glorious in our sky, some
people are disinclined to believe that it is only a star;
indeed, astronomers relegate it to the status of a Yellow
Dwarf! Its closeness to us means that it is the only star
which we can examine in detail.
Its diameter is 1,392,000 kilometres (865,000 miles),
and it could engulf over a million globes the volume of
the Earth, but it is very much less dense, because it is
made up of incandescent gas. At the core, where the ener-
gy is being produced, the temperature may be as high as
15,000,000 degrees C; even the bright surface which we
can see – the photosphere – is at a temperature of 5500
degrees C. It is here that we see the familiar sunspots and
the bright regions known as faculae. Above the photo-
sphere comes the chromosphere, a layer of much more
rarefied gas, and finally the corona, which may be regard-
ed as the Sun’s outer atmosphere.
The Sun is nowhere near the centre of the Galaxy; it is
around 25,000 light-years from the nucleus. It is sharing
in the general rotation of the Galaxy, moving at 220 kilo-
metres (140 miles) per second, and taking 225 million
years to complete one circuit – a period often called the
cosmic year; one cosmic year ago, even the dinosaurs lay
in the future!
The Sun is rotating on its axis, but it does not spin in
the way that a solid body would do. The rotation period
at the equator is 25.4 days, but near the poles it is about
34 days. This is easy to observe by the drift of the
sunspots across the disk; it takes about a fortnight for a
group to cross the disk from one limb to the other.
The greatest care must be taken when observing the
Sun. Looking directly at it with any telescope, or even
binoculars, means focusing all the light and (worse) the

heat on to the observer’s eye, and total and permanent
blindness will result. Even using a dark filter is unsafe; fil-
ters are apt to shatter without warning, and in any case
cannot give full protection. The only sensible method is to
use the telescope as a projector, and observe the Sun’s disk
on a screen held or fastened behind the telescope eyepiece.
We know that the Earth is approximately 4600 million
years old, and the Sun is certainly older than this. A Sun
made up entirely of coal, and burning furiously enough to
emit as much energy as the real Sun actually does, would
be reduced to ashes in only 5000 years. In fact, the Sun’s
energy is drawn from nuclear transformations near its
core, where the temperatures and pressures are colossal.
Not surprisingly, the Sun consists largely of hydrogen
(over 70 per cent), and near the core the nuclei of hydro-
gen atoms are combining to form nuclei of the next light-
est element, helium. It takes four hydrogen nuclei to make
one helium nucleus; each time this happens, a little energy
is released and a little mass is lost. It is this energy which
keeps the Sun shining, and the mass-loss amounts to
4 million tonnes per second. Fortunately there is no cause
for immediate alarm; the Sun will not change dramatically
for at least a thousand million years yet.
The photosphere extends down to about 300 kilo-
metres (190 miles), and below this comes the convection
zone, which has a depth of about 200,000 kilometres
(125,000 miles); here, energy is carried upwards from
below by moving streams and masses of gas. Next comes
the radiative zone, and finally the energy-producing core,
which seems to have a diameter of around 450,000 kilo-
metres (280,000 miles). The theoretical models seem
satisfactory enough, and a major problem has recently
been solved. The Sun sends out vast numbers of strange

SOLAR DATA

Distance from Earth 149,597,893 km (92.970,000
mile or 1 astronomical unit)
Mean distance from centre 25,000 light-years
of Galaxy
Velocity round centre 220 km/s (140 miles/s)
of Galaxy
Revolution period 225,000,000 years
round centre of Galaxy
Apparent diameter max. 32’ 35”,
mean 32’ 01”, min. 31’ 31”
Density, water = 1 1.409
Mass, Earth = 1 332,946
Mass 2 x 10^27 tonnes
Volume, Earth = 1 1,303,600
Surface gravity, Earth = 1 27.9
Escape velocity 617.5 km/s (384 miles/s)
Mean apparent magnitude 26.8 (600,000 Full Moons)
Absolute magnitude 4.83
Spectrum G2
Surface temperature 5500°C
Core temperature about 15,000,000°C
Rotation period (equatorial) 25.4 days.
Diameter (equatorial) 1,392,000 km (865,000 miles)

▼ Cross-section of the Sun
showing the core, radiative
zone, convective zone,
photosphere, chromosphere
and corona.

Earth

Jupiter

Core

Radiative
layer

Convective
layer
Photosphere

Chromosphere

Corona

E152- 191 UNIVERSE UK 2003mb 7/4/03 5:40 pm Page 154

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