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Download 8.2 Solar Nebula Theory and the Sun
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Solar Nebula Theory and the Sun Don’t forget your sunblock! The Sun • Most important celestial object for life on Earth – Contributes heat moderate temperatures – Contributes light visibility – Photosynthesis provides autotrophs with energy to make food, provides consumers with food Where Did it Come From? • Current theory: Solar Nebula Theory – Stars and planets formed together • Star: Celestial body of hot gasses (H and He) • Star formation – A hot core surrounded by gas and dust • Gas and dust = nebula – Sometimes, this leftover material drifts into space – Sometimes, it remains in the nebula, bound by gravity How the Solar System Formed How the Solar System Formed • Gravity sets gas and dust particles into motion – No resistance in space! – The closer the particles get to each other, the stronger the force of gravity • Particles aren’t perfectly aligned so they end up spinning around in a nebula How the Solar System Formed • Spinning nebula contracts and flattens into a disc – Accretion disc • Particles begin to gather in the centre of the nebula – Forming a protostar (hot, condensed object) How the Solar System Formed • Tiny grains or small lumps collect in nebula – Attract others and build up to bigger, rocky lumps called planetismals • If planetismals survive collisions, they may build up to full planets like those in our solar system • If their mass is >10x that of Jupiter, fusion begins and a star is formed How the Solar System Formed How the Solar System Formed How the Solar System Formed Extrasolar planets • Many planets have been discovered in orbit about stars other than the Sun – “extrasolar planets” • They can be detected by – A) the dimming of their star’s light as they pass in front of it – B) direct photos How the Sun Formed • Nebula collapses, contracts, and gas compresses – Friction of all that material in nebula causes a temperature increase • At 10 000 000°C, nuclear fusion begins – The combining of 2 atomic nuclei to form 1 large nucleus – H + H He + energy Sun’s Nuclear Fusion H Small atoms He + Energy! H Large atom • 1 g of Hydrogen provides enough energy for a home in Canada for about 40 years Sun’s Nuclear Fusion • H nuclei combine to form Helium – Requires massive pressure and temp – Now called “protostar” • He is more dense that H – :. He settles in Sun’s core • Pressure in the core is very high. When it balances with force of gravity pulling in matter toward core = stable star Sun’s Nuclear Fusion Sun’s Nuclear Fusion • When the sun converts ~ 10% of H to He, He core accumulates and undergoes fusion itself – Sun changes physically • • • • He core grows H fusion (ring around core) also grows :. The sun is growing… yowsa! ~ 30% larger than its protostar phase Sun’s Nuclear Fusion Structure of the Sun • He core (where solar energy is produced) • Radiative zone: 86% of sun’s energy radiates outward from core • Convective zone: outer layer transfers energy in convection currents back in towards sun • Photosphere: “surface” layer of sun 2 Important processes: Convection and Radiation Features of the Sun Sunspots • Def: An area of strong magnetic force on the photosphere • Sunspots are not dark, they are bright – Appear dark due to contrasting temperature to photosphere • Photosphere: 6000˚C • Sunspot: 4500˚C Sunspots • By observing sunspots, astronomers learned the sun rotates in 27-35 days • Gradually grow, may fade and disappear altogether • Occur in 22-year cycles Solar Flare Solar flare: Magnetic fields explosively eject intense streams (solar wind) of charged particles into space Solar Flare • If one of the streams hits Earth, it can: – Disrupt telecommunication and electrical equipment – Usually beautiful auroras • Shimmery curtains of high energy, charged particles • Electric currents charging gasses in Earth’s atmosphere