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Observations of the Sun
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Our sun is a typical “second generation,” or G2, star nearly 4.5 billion years old. The sun is composed of 92.1% hydrogen and 7.8% helium gas, as well as 0.1% of such all-important heavy elements as oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, magnesium, neon, iron, sulfur, and so forth in decreasing amounts (see Appendix 3). The heavy elements are generated from nucleosynthetic processes in stars, novae, and supernovae after the original formation of the Universe. This has led to the popular statement that we are, literally, the “children of the stars” because our bodies are composed of the elements formed inside stars. From astronomical studies of stellar structure, we know that, since its beginnings, the sun’s luminosity has gradually increased by about 30%. This startling conclusion has raised the so-called faint young sun climate problem: if the sun were even a few percent fainter in the past, then Earth could have been covered by ice. In this frozen state, it might not have warmed because the ice would reflect most of the incoming solar radiation back into space. Although volcanic aerosols covering the ice, early oceans moderating the climate, and other theories have been suggested to circumvent the “faint young sun” problem, how Earth escaped the ice catastrophe remains uncertain. How can the sun generate vast amounts of energy for billions of years and still keep shining? Before nuclear physics, scientists believed the sun generated energy by means of slow gravitational collapse. Still, this process would only let the sun shine about 30 million years before its energy was depleted. To shine longer, the sun requires another energy source. We now believe that a chain of nuclear reactions occurs inside the sun, with four hydrogen nuclei fusing into one helium nucleus at the sun’s center. Because the four hydrogen nuclei have more mass than the one helium nucleus, the resulting mass deficit is converted into energy according to Einstein’s famous formula E = mc2. The energy, produced near the sun’s center, creates a central temperature of about 15 million degrees Kelvin (°K).
Oxford University Press
Title: Observations of the Sun
Description:
Our sun is a typical “second generation,” or G2, star nearly 4.
5 billion years old.
The sun is composed of 92.
1% hydrogen and 7.
8% helium gas, as well as 0.
1% of such all-important heavy elements as oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, magnesium, neon, iron, sulfur, and so forth in decreasing amounts (see Appendix 3).
The heavy elements are generated from nucleosynthetic processes in stars, novae, and supernovae after the original formation of the Universe.
This has led to the popular statement that we are, literally, the “children of the stars” because our bodies are composed of the elements formed inside stars.
From astronomical studies of stellar structure, we know that, since its beginnings, the sun’s luminosity has gradually increased by about 30%.
This startling conclusion has raised the so-called faint young sun climate problem: if the sun were even a few percent fainter in the past, then Earth could have been covered by ice.
In this frozen state, it might not have warmed because the ice would reflect most of the incoming solar radiation back into space.
Although volcanic aerosols covering the ice, early oceans moderating the climate, and other theories have been suggested to circumvent the “faint young sun” problem, how Earth escaped the ice catastrophe remains uncertain.
How can the sun generate vast amounts of energy for billions of years and still keep shining? Before nuclear physics, scientists believed the sun generated energy by means of slow gravitational collapse.
Still, this process would only let the sun shine about 30 million years before its energy was depleted.
To shine longer, the sun requires another energy source.
We now believe that a chain of nuclear reactions occurs inside the sun, with four hydrogen nuclei fusing into one helium nucleus at the sun’s center.
Because the four hydrogen nuclei have more mass than the one helium nucleus, the resulting mass deficit is converted into energy according to Einstein’s famous formula E = mc2.
The energy, produced near the sun’s center, creates a central temperature of about 15 million degrees Kelvin (°K).
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