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It was not until about 1600 that anyone speculated that the Sun and the stars were the same kind of objects. We now know that the Sun is one of about 100,000,000,000 (1011) stars in our own galaxy, the Milky Way, and that there are probably at least 1011 galaxies in the Universe. The Sun seems to be a very average, middle-aged star some 4.5 billion years old with our nearest neighbor star about 4 light-years away. Our own location in the galaxy is toward the outer edge, about 30,000 light-years from the galactic center. The solar system orbits the center of the galaxy with a period of about 200,000,000 years, an amount of time we may think of as a Sun-year. In its life so far, the Sun has made about 22 trips around the galaxy; like a 22-year old human, it is still in the prime of its life.
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15% brighter than it is at present. By the time the Sun is 10 billion years old, it will be about twice as bright as it now is and have a radius about 40% greater (Figure 11).
Absolute Magnitude (Brightness at a standard distance)
Figure 11.A Hertzprung-Russell diagram showing selected stars on a plot of luminosity versus the surface temperature.
B 10,000
F 6,000
K 3,000
8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 O 25,000 White Dwarf Black Dwarf B 10,000 A F 6,000 G K 3,000 M Hydrogen core exhaused Today Birth Red giant
Figure 12.The life of the Sun on a Hertzprung-Russell diagram. The Sun was born on the main sequence and has since brightened and cooled. The Suns hydrogen core will eventually be exhausted, after the Sun is 10 billion years old. The Sun will become, in turn, a red giant, a white dwarf, and a black dwarf.
layers will expand for the next 1.5 billion years until the Sun is 3 times its present size. An observer on Earth would see the Sun as a bright-red disk, 3 times the size of a full Moon. However, the presence of such an observer is doubtful, for the luminosity will be 3 times greater than it is now, and the Earth will be 100 K hotter than at present. The Sun will keep expanding in size and luminosity, becoming a red giant star. Its radius will reach 100 times its present size, so that the planet Mercury will be engulfed and vaporized. Its luminosity will be 500 times the present value, causing Earths surface to become a sea of molten lava at a temperature of about 1700 K. The Sun will remain in this red giant stage for a mere 250 million years (about 1 Sun-year), while its core contracts and heats up. When the core
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temperature reaches about 100 million K, the helium ash remaining from the earlier stages of nuclear fusion can begin to fuse into carbon. This will release huge amounts of energy and raise the core temperature to about 300 million K. The ignition of helium fusion is a sudden and explosive event known as the helium flash. As much as one-third of the Suns mass will be hurled out into space, forming a planetary nebula. The core then will cool to about 100 million K, where it will begin the steady burning of helium. By then it will be about 10 times its present diameter and have 20 times its present luminosity.
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light could escape from it. Astronomers have now detected several dark regions of space that emit x-rays. It is thought that these x-rays are produced as electrons accelerate into a black hole. It is interesting to speculate about where matter goes after it disappears into a black hole. Some scientists believe that the black hole can eventually fill up and return as normal matter, while others have suggested that perhaps a black hole has another side, a white hole, where matter spontaneously appears in space. Perhaps the black hole is a portal to another universe, or a shortcut to a distant location in our own universe (a wormhole). It has been theorized that strange things like these may exist near the center of galaxies. Much of our knowledge of stellar evolutionthe birth, life and death of starsis based on observations of the Sun. For astrophysicists, the Sun is a magnificent laboratory for the detailed study of stars. But as we have looked more closely at the Sun over the last few decades using space-based instruments, a complex and mysterious picture has emerged. The turbulent surface atmosphere that we observe, with its contorted and dynamic magnetic field structures, is still highly unpredictable. Although we know more about the Sun every day, there are many unanswered questions, and new ones arise constantly.
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