SCIE 7 ASTRONOMY CHAPTER 5 Lesson 1
SCIE 7 ASTRONOMY CHAPTER 5 Lesson 1
SCIE 7 ASTRONOMY CHAPTER 5 Lesson 1
One of the bright lines of hydrogen contributes a good portion of its total
output and accounts for this sphere’s red color. The top of the chromosphere
contains numerous spicules (spica = point), flamelike structures that extend upward
about 10,000 km into the lower corona. Spicules are produced by the turbulent
motion of the granules below.
Studies of the energy emitted from the photosphere indicate that its
temperature averages about 6,000 K (10,000 degrees Fahrenheit). Upward from the
photosphere, the temperature unexpectedly increases, exceeding 1 million K at the
top of the corona.
SUNSPOTS SOLAR INTERIOR
The most conspicuous features on the surface of the Sun are the dark Deep in its interior, a nuclear reaction called photon-photon chain converts
blemishes called sunspots. The Sun’s equator rotates once in 25 days, whereas a four hydrogen nuclei (protons) into the nucleus of a helium atom. The energy
place located 70 degrees from the solar equator, either north or south, requires 33 released from the photon-photon reaction results because some of the matter
days for one rotation. involved is actually converted to radiant energy.
PROMINENCES The Sun is consuming an estimated 600 million tons of hydrogen each
Among the more spectacular features of the active Sun are prominences. second, with about 4 million tons of it being converted to energy. The by-product of
These huge cloudlike structures, consisting of concentrations of chromospheric hydrogen burning is helium, which forms the solar core.
gases, are best observed when they are on the edge, or limb, of the Sun, where they
often appear as bright arches that extend well into the corona.
SOLAR FLARES
Brief outbursts that normally last an hour or so and appear as a sudden
brightening of the region above a sunspot cluster. The most spectacular effects of
solar flares are the auroras, also called the Northern and Southern Lights.
It is believed that a star the size of the Sun can remain in a stable state for
about 10 billion years. Since the Sun is already 5 billion years old, it is “middle-
aged.” The planet Jupiter is basically a hydrogen-rich gas ball. If it were about 10
times more massive, it too might have become a star.
Following a strong solar flare, Earth’s upper atmosphere above the magnetic
poles is set aglow for several nights. Auroral displays, like other solar activities, vary
in intensity with the 11-year sunspot cycle.