The Solar System - General Science & Ability Notes For CSS
The Solar System - General Science & Ability Notes For CSS
Sun
The sun lies at the heart of the solar system, where it is by far the largest object. It holds
99.8 percent of the solar system’s mass and is roughly 109 times the diameter of the Earth
— about one million Earths could fit inside the sun.
The Sun’s core has a tremendously high temperature and pressure. The temperature is
roughly 15 million °C. At this temperature, nuclear fusion occurs, turning four hydrogen
nuclei into a single helium nucleus plus a LOT of energy. This “hydrogen burning” releases
gamma rays (high-energy photons) and neutrinos (particles with no charge and almost no
mass).
The Photosphere
This is the lower atmosphere of the Sun and the part that we see (since it emits light at
visible wavelengths). This layer is about 300 miles (500km) thick. The temperature is about
5,500 °C.
The Chromosphere
This reddish layer is an area of rising temperatures. The temperature ranges from 6,000 °C
(at lower altitudes) to 50,000 °C (at higher altitudes). This layer is a few thousand miles (or
kilometers) thick. It appears red because hydrogen atoms are in an excite state and emit
radiation near the red part of the visible spectrum. The Chromosphere is visible during solar
eclipses (when the moon blocks the Photosphere).
The Corona
This is the outer layer of the Sun’s atmosphere. The corona extends for millions of miles and
the temperatures are tremendous, reaching one million °C.
Solar Wind
The solar wind is a continuous stream of ions (electrically charged particles) that are given
off by magnetic anomalies on the Sun. The solar wind is emitted where the Sun’s magnetic
field loops out into space instead of looping back into the Sun. These magnetic anomalies in
the Sun’s corona are called coronal holes. In X-ray photographs of the Sun, coronal holes
are black areas.
It takes the solar wind about 4.5 days to reach Earth; it has a velocity of about 250 miles/sec
(400 km/sec). Since the particles are emitted from the Sun as the Sun rotates, the solar
wind blows in a pinwheel pattern through the solar system. The solar wind affects the entire
Solar System, including buffeting comets’ tails away from the Sun, causing auroras on Earth
(and some other planets), the disruption of electronic communications on Earth, pushing
spacecraft around, etc.
Sunspots
Sunspots are relatively cool, dark patches on the sun’s surface. They come in many shapes
and sizes; they often appear in groups. These spots are much bigger than the Earth; they
can be over 10 times the diameter of the Earths.
Temperatures in sunspots are much cooler than elsewhere on the Sun. Usually the Sun’s
surface temperature is about 5,500 °C (9,900 °F) but in sunspots, the temperature is
between 2,700 °C to 4,200 °C (4,900 °F to 7,600 °F). The Sun, like many objects in the Solar
System (including Earth) has a magnetic field. A magnetic field is basically invisible
magnetic lines (flux) travelling into and out of the Sun produced by electrically charged
particles. These lines would usually travel through the Sun regularly, or, in other words,
following the route they took when they entered it. However, as the Sun is a ball of gas, it
spins faster towards its equator than towards its poles. This muddled way of spinning
(known as differential rotation) disturbs the route of the magnetic field, and causes some of
the lines of magnetism to warp and twist. Sometimes they become so distorted that they
“snap” like elastic bands and pop out of the Sun’s surface. The intense magnetism in these
magnetic fields lines is powerful enough to push back some of the hot gases travelling
outwards from the Sun. This prevents some of the heat from reaching the surface and
causes the area to be cooler. And as heat energy also produces light, areas – or spots –
where the Sun is cooler are also darker than other areas, and they become known as
sunspots.
The sunspot cycle was discovered by S. Heinrich Schwabe in 1843 (he started his
observations in 1826).