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The Sun

The Sun
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Sol

sol
Our Sun is a normal main-sequence G2 star, one of more than 100 billion stars in our galaxy.
        diameter:    1,390,000 km.
        mass:        1.989e30 kg
        temperature: 5800 K (surface)
                     15,600,000 K (core)

The Sun is by far the largest object in the solar system. It contains more than 99.8% of the total mass of the Solar System (Jupiter contains most of the rest).

It is often said that the Sun is an "ordinary" star. That's true in the sense that there are many others similar to it. But there are many more smaller stars than larger ones; the Sun is in the top 10% by mass. The median size of stars in our galaxy is probably less than half the mass of the Sun.

The Sun is personified in many mythologies: the Greeks called itHelios and the Romans called it Sol.

The Sun is, at present, about 70%hydrogenand 28% heliumby mass everything else ("metals") amounts to less than 2%. This changes slowly over time as the Sun converts hydrogen to helium in its core.

The outer layers of the Sun exhibit differential rotation: at the equator the surface rotates once every 25.4 days; near the poles it's as much as 36 days. This odd behavior is due to the fact that the Sun is not a solid body like the Earth. Similar effects are seen in the gas planets. The differential rotation extends considerably down into the interior of the Sun but the core of the Sun rotates as a solid body.

Conditions at the Sun's core (approximately the inner 25% of its radius) are extreme. The temperature is 15.6 million Kelvin and the pressure is 250 billion atmospheres. At the center of the core the Sun's density is more than 150 times that of water.

The Sun's power (about 386 billion billion megaWatts) is produced by nuclear fusion reactions. Each second about 700,000,000 tons of hydrogen are converted to about 695,000,000 tons of helium and 5,000,000 tons (=3.86e33 ergs) of energy in the form of gamma rays. As it travels out toward the surface, the energy is continuously absorbed and re-emitted at lower and lower temperatures so that by the time it reaches the surface, it is primarily visible light. For the last 20% of the way to the surface the energy is carried more by convection than by radiation.

The surface of the Sun, called the photosphere, is at a temperature of about 5800 K. Sunspots are "cool" regions, only 3800 K (they look dark only by comparison with the surrounding regions). Sunspots can be very large, as much as 50,000 km in diameter. Sunspots are caused by complicated and not very well understood interactions with the Sun's magnetic field.

A small region known as the chromosphere lies above the photosphere.

The highly rarefied region above the chromosphere, called the corona, extends millions of kilometers into space but is visible only during a total solar eclipse (left). Temperatures in the corona are over 1,000,000 K.

It just happens that the Moon and the Sun appear the same size in the sky as viewed from the Earth. And since the Moon orbits the Earth in approximately the same plane as the Earth's orbit around the Sun sometimes the Moon comes directly between the Earth and the Sun. This is called a solar eclipse; if the alignment is slighly imperfect then the Moon covers only part of the Sun's disk and the event is called a partial eclipse. When it lines up perfectly the entire solar disk is blocked and it is called a total eclipse of the Sun. Partial eclipses are visible over a wide area of the Earth but the region from which a total eclipse is visible, called the path of totality, is very narrow, just a few kilometers (though it is usually thousands of kilometers long). Eclipses of the Sun happen once or twice a year. If you stay home, you're likely to see a partial eclipse several times per decade. But since the path of totality is so small it is very unlikely that it will cross you home. So people often travel half way around the world just to see a total solar eclipse. To stand in the shadow of the Moon is an awesome experience. For a few precious minutes it gets dark in the middle of the day. The stars come out. The animals and birds think it's time to sleep. And you can see the solar corona. It is well worth a major journey.

The Sun's magnetic field is very strong (by terrestrial standards) and very complicated. Its magnetosphere (also known as the heliosphere) extends well beyond Pluto.

In addition to heat and light, the Sun also emits a low density stream of charged particles (mostly electrons and protons) known as the solar wind which propagates throughout the solar system at about 450 km/sec. The solar wind and the much higher energy particles ejected by solar flares can have dramatic effects on the Earth ranging from power line surges to radio interference to the beautiful aurora borealis.

Recent data from the spacecraft Ulysses show that during the minimum of the solar cycle the solar wind emanating from the polar regions flows at nearly double the rate, 750 kilometers per second, than it does at lower latitudes. The composition of the solar wind also appears to differ in the polar regions. During the solar maximum, however, the solar wind moves at an intermediate speed.

Further study of the solar wind will be done by the recently launched Wind, ACE and SOHO spacecraft from the dynamically stable vantage point directly between the Earth and the Sun about 1.6 million km from Earth.

The solar wind has large effects on the tails of comets and even has measurable effects on the trajectories of spacecraft.

Spectacular loops and prominences are often visible on the Sun's limb (left).

The Sun's output is not entirely constant. Nor is the amount of sunspot activity. There was a period of very low sunspot activity in the latter half of the 17th century called the Maunder Minimum. It coincides with an abnormally cold period in northern Europe sometimes known as the Little Ice Age. Since the formation of the solar system the Sun's output has increased by about 40%.

The Sun is about 4.5 billion years old. Since its birth it has used up about half of the hydrogen in its core. It will continue to radiate "peacefully" for another 5 billion years or so (although its luminosity will approximately double in that time). But eventually it will run out of hydrogen fuel. It will then be forced into radical changes which, though commonplace by stellar standards, will result in the total destruction of the Earth (and probably the creation of a planetary nebula).

The Sun's satellites

There are eight planets and a large number ofsmaller objects orbiting the Sun. (Exactly which bodies should be classified as planets and which as "smaller objects" has been the source of somecontroversy, but in the end it is really only a matter of definition. Pluto is no longer officially a planet but we'll keep it here for history's sake.)

            Distance  Radius    Mass
Planet      (000 km)   (km)     (kg)   Discoverer   Date
---------  ---------  ------  -------  ----------  -----
Mercury       57,910    2439  3.30e23
Venus        108,200    6052  4.87e24
Earth        149,600    6378  5.98e24
Mars         227,940    3397  6.42e23
Jupiter      778,330   71492  1.90e27
Saturn     1,426,940   60268  5.69e26
Uranus     2,870,990   25559  8.69e25   Herschel    1781
Neptune    4,497,070   24764  1.02e26   Galle       1846
Pluto      5,913,520    1160  1.31e22   Tombaugh    1930

More detailed data and definitions of terms can be found on thedata page.

More about the Sun

Open Issues

  • Is there a causal connection between the Maunder Minimum and the Little Ice Age or was it just a coincidence? How does the variability of the Sun affect the Earth's climate?
  • Since all the planets except Pluto orbit the Sun within a few degrees of the plane of the Sun's equator, we know very little about the interplanetary environment outside that plane. The Ulysses mission will provide information about the polar regions of the Sun.
  • The corona is much hotter than the photosphere. Why?

Home ... Overview ... Sun ... Mercury ... Spacecraft ... Data
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1994 - 2012 © CopyrightNine Planets- A guide to our solar system and beyond.

The Planets & their moons

Guides

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The Sun

The Sun
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Sol

sol
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Our Sun is a normal main-sequence G2 star, one of more than 100 billion stars in our galaxy.
        diameter:    1,390,000 km.
        mass:        1.989e30 kg
        temperature: 5800 K (surface)
                     15,600,000 K (core)

The Sun is by far the largest object in the solar system. It contains more than 99.8% of the total mass of the Solar System (Jupiter contains most of the rest).

It is often said that the Sun is an "ordinary" star. That's true in the sense that there are many others similar to it. But there are many more smaller stars than larger ones; the Sun is in the top 10% by mass. The median size of stars in our galaxy is probably less than half the mass of the Sun.

The Sun is personified in many mythologies: the Greeks called itHelios and the Romans called it Sol.

The Sun is, at present, about 70%hydrogenand 28% heliumby mass everything else ("metals") amounts to less than 2%. This changes slowly over time as the Sun converts hydrogen to helium in its core.

The outer layers of the Sun exhibit differential rotation: at the equator the surface rotates once every 25.4 days; near the poles it's as much as 36 days. This odd behavior is due to the fact that the Sun is not a solid body like the Earth. Similar effects are seen in the gas planets. The differential rotation extends considerably down into the interior of the Sun but the core of the Sun rotates as a solid body.

Conditions at the Sun's core (approximately the inner 25% of its radius) are extreme. The temperature is 15.6 million Kelvin and the pressure is 250 billion atmospheres. At the center of the core the Sun's density is more than 150 times that of water.

The Sun's power (about 386 billion billion megaWatts) is produced by nuclear fusion reactions. Each second about 700,000,000 tons of hydrogen are converted to about 695,000,000 tons of helium and 5,000,000 tons (=3.86e33 ergs) of energy in the form of gamma rays. As it travels out toward the surface, the energy is continuously absorbed and re-emitted at lower and lower temperatures so that by the time it reaches the surface, it is primarily visible light. For the last 20% of the way to the surface the energy is carried more by convection than by radiation.

The surface of the Sun, called the photosphere, is at a temperature of about 5800 K. Sunspots are "cool" regions, only 3800 K (they look dark only by comparison with the surrounding regions). Sunspots can be very large, as much as 50,000 km in diameter. Sunspots are caused by complicated and not very well understood interactions with the Sun's magnetic field.

A small region known as the chromosphere lies above the photosphere.

The highly rarefied region above the chromosphere, called the corona, extends millions of kilometers into space but is visible only during a total solar eclipse (left). Temperatures in the corona are over 1,000,000 K.

It just happens that the Moon and the Sun appear the same size in the sky as viewed from the Earth. And since the Moon orbits the Earth in approximately the same plane as the Earth's orbit around the Sun sometimes the Moon comes directly between the Earth and the Sun. This is called a solar eclipse; if the alignment is slighly imperfect then the Moon covers only part of the Sun's disk and the event is called a partial eclipse. When it lines up perfectly the entire solar disk is blocked and it is called a total eclipse of the Sun. Partial eclipses are visible over a wide area of the Earth but the region from which a total eclipse is visible, called the path of totality, is very narrow, just a few kilometers (though it is usually thousands of kilometers long). Eclipses of the Sun happen once or twice a year. If you stay home, you're likely to see a partial eclipse several times per decade. But since the path of totality is so small it is very unlikely that it will cross you home. So people often travel half way around the world just to see a total solar eclipse. To stand in the shadow of the Moon is an awesome experience. For a few precious minutes it gets dark in the middle of the day. The stars come out. The animals and birds think it's time to sleep. And you can see the solar corona. It is well worth a major journey.

The Sun's magnetic field is very strong (by terrestrial standards) and very complicated. Its magnetosphere (also known as the heliosphere) extends well beyond Pluto.

In addition to heat and light, the Sun also emits a low density stream of charged particles (mostly electrons and protons) known as the solar wind which propagates throughout the solar system at about 450 km/sec. The solar wind and the much higher energy particles ejected by solar flares can have dramatic effects on the Earth ranging from power line surges to radio interference to the beautiful aurora borealis.

Recent data from the spacecraft Ulysses show that during the minimum of the solar cycle the solar wind emanating from the polar regions flows at nearly double the rate, 750 kilometers per second, than it does at lower latitudes. The composition of the solar wind also appears to differ in the polar regions. During the solar maximum, however, the solar wind moves at an intermediate speed.

Further study of the solar wind will be done by the recently launched Wind, ACE and SOHO spacecraft from the dynamically stable vantage point directly between the Earth and the Sun about 1.6 million km from Earth.

The solar wind has large effects on the tails of comets and even has measurable effects on the trajectories of spacecraft.

Spectacular loops and prominences are often visible on the Sun's limb (left).

The Sun's output is not entirely constant. Nor is the amount of sunspot activity. There was a period of very low sunspot activity in the latter half of the 17th century called the Maunder Minimum. It coincides with an abnormally cold period in northern Europe sometimes known as the Little Ice Age. Since the formation of the solar system the Sun's output has increased by about 40%.

The Sun is about 4.5 billion years old. Since its birth it has used up about half of the hydrogen in its core. It will continue to radiate "peacefully" for another 5 billion years or so (although its luminosity will approximately double in that time). But eventually it will run out of hydrogen fuel. It will then be forced into radical changes which, though commonplace by stellar standards, will result in the total destruction of the Earth (and probably the creation of a planetary nebula).

The Sun's satellites

There are eight planets and a large number ofsmaller objects orbiting the Sun. (Exactly which bodies should be classified as planets and which as "smaller objects" has been the source of somecontroversy, but in the end it is really only a matter of definition. Pluto is no longer officially a planet but we'll keep it here for history's sake.)
            Distance  Radius    Mass
Planet      (000 km)   (km)     (kg)   Discoverer   Date
---------  ---------  ------  -------  ----------  -----
Mercury       57,910    2439  3.30e23
Venus        108,200    6052  4.87e24
Earth        149,600    6378  5.98e24
Mars         227,940    3397  6.42e23
Jupiter      778,330   71492  1.90e27
Saturn     1,426,940   60268  5.69e26
Uranus     2,870,990   25559  8.69e25   Herschel    1781
Neptune    4,497,070   24764  1.02e26   Galle       1846
Pluto      5,913,520    1160  1.31e22   Tombaugh    1930

More detailed data and definitions of terms can be found on thedata page.

More about the Sun

Open Issues

  • Is there a causal connection between the Maunder Minimum and the Little Ice Age or was it just a coincidence? How does the variability of the Sun affect the Earth's climate?
  • Since all the planets except Pluto orbit the Sun within a few degrees of the plane of the Sun's equator, we know very little about the interplanetary environment outside that plane. The Ulysses mission will provide information about the polar regions of the Sun.
  • The corona is much hotter than the photosphere. Why?

Home ... Overview ... Sun ... Mercury ... Spacecraft ... Data
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1994 - 2012 © CopyrightNine Planets- A guide to our solar system and beyond.

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Astronomy Photos


Read more about The Sun l Sun Facts and images. by nineplanets.org

 

diameter: 1,390,000 km. mass: 1.989e30 kgtemperature: 5800 K (surface) 15,600,000 K (core) diameter: 1,390,000 km. mass: 1.989e30 kgtemperature: 5800 K (surface) 15,600,000 K (cor

diameter: 1,390,000 km. mass: 1.989e30 kgtemperature: 5800 K (surface) 15,600,000 K (core)


Read more about The Sun l Sun Facts and images. by nineplanets.org

116585384D258F2B33D34A

                            일광욕을 하는 사람들

 

동부 시베리아의 아름다운 풍경  (이루크츠크의 유원지. 좌측 앙가라 江)

1779AB384D258F17075041

 

  • ?
    yk 2012.07.05 02:02

    Dear Mr.Admin.:

    Thank U so much for your help!  You knew it already. <hm>

    Something happened!  I could not figure out.

  • ?
    Young 2012.07.05 16:34

    206D63384D258F2C1FF354

    본래는 이 사진을 올릴려고 한 것인데 . . . The Sun 사진이 왜 올려졌는지? 모르겠습니다 <죄송>


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3682 물위를 걷는 사나이 - 템즈강을 건느다 1 Young 2012.07.17 2021
3681 청년들이 교회를 떠나 간다! (김성진님 글을 읽고 한마디...) 5 푸른빛 2012.07.16 2451
3680 모든것이 똑같아야 하는 안식교회는 잔소리꾼들의 천국.. (수정) 22 김 성 진 2012.07.15 2661
3679 이탈? 거부? 자유? 구도? 2 Brother 2012.07.15 1962
3678 우리가 해야 할 시급한 일 푸른잎 2012.07.15 1574
3677 학생, 청년 전도법 1(수정: 마지막 댓글에 첫째 천사의 기별과 믿음으로 말미암는 의에 대한 명쾌한 설명 추가) 13 최종오 2012.07.15 3461
3676 뉴스타트는 정말 잘못된 것인가? 2 궁금이 2012.07.15 2084
3675 한국교회의 개들. 2 전도왕 2012.07.15 2829
3674 아름다운 사랑 2 깃대봉 2012.07.14 1732
3673 청년들의 교회이탈(2) 김가네 2012.07.14 1853
3672 청년들의 교회 이탈.... 1 김가네 2012.07.14 1704
3671 안식일 교회 망해야한다. 바이블 2012.07.14 1761
3670 할만큼 했거든 !!! 9 김 성 진 2012.07.13 3894
3669 이단보다 무서운 큰 교회 사유화...공교회성 회복 위한 심포지엄...교인 상한선·공익 재단 설립 제안 프로모션 2012.07.13 2195
3668 청년들의 교회 이탈에 관심있으면 꼭 읽어봐야 하는 글.. 4 김 성 진 2012.07.13 2369
3667 [평화의 연찬]『하나님께 피하라』| 김선만 목사(북아시아태평양지회 PMM 부부장) | <제18회 연찬> | (사)평화교류협의회 평화교류협의회 2012.07.12 2453
3666 다윗과 사울 로산 2012.07.12 2629
3665 지옥에의 초청 3 로산 2012.07.12 2045
3664 일 년 전(2011년 4월호) 교회지남을 읽으면서 느낀 점 1 로산 2012.07.12 2307
3663 박근혜, 이회창 꼴 되나? 1 로산 2012.07.11 1947
3662 Cristofori's Dream / David Lanz 1 1.5세 2012.07.11 2141
3661 로산님 이건 어떻게 생각하시나요? 11 종북 2012.07.11 3685
3660 [인간 유전자 게ㄴ ㅗ ㅁ지도] 완성.mp4 (+자료) 8 반달 2012.07.10 5694
3659 제 생일축하를 해주신 여러분께...(내 페이스 북에 올렸던 글) 3 최종오 2012.07.10 3403
3658 오강남 교수님 집회 안내 15 file admin 2012.07.07 3721
3657 [민초 가족에게 드리는 7월의 선물]: Chanrice & Dion Duet - The Whole Story (+자료수집) 7 반달 2012.07.07 4058
3656 박정희 향수를 그리워하는 당신에게 1 신약 2012.07.06 1832
3655 [평화의 연찬]『빠빠라기』| 김선만 목사(북아시아태평양지회 PMM 부부장) | <제17회 연찬> | (사)평화교류협의회 평화교류협의회 2012.07.05 3372
3654 악어의 눈물을 흘리던 전쟁 기념관을 기억하는가? 꼭 읽어볼만한 글입니다 2 로산 2012.07.05 1985
3653 청년을들 떠나지 않게 하는 방법은 없는가? 4 로산 2012.07.05 2475
3652 [2 0 1 2 년] . . 지구촌에서는 이런 일들이 일어나고 있다 . . (+자료-재림) 2 반달 2012.07.05 3769
3651 "재림이 가깝고 심판이 가깝다" .... 는 것이 "기별"인가 ? 4 샤다이 2012.07.05 2188
» ★ 동부 시베리아의 아름다운 풍경 ★ 2 Young 2012.07.05 38687
3649 어느 대학생의 이야기 (김성진님 참조) 8 나그네 2012.07.04 2889
3648 墮落(타락) 깃대봉 2012.07.04 2545
3647 2012년 교회주소록 소유하신 분들 보세요. 2 최종오 2012.07.04 4021
3646 아버지 아버지!!! 로또를 물러 주셔서 감쏴 6 로산 2012.07.04 2815
3645 한이 서린 승리의 피아노 연주 최종오 2012.07.04 1920
3644 2 세들의 이민교회 이탈.. (Silent Exodus) 22 김 성 진 2012.07.04 3744
3643 사상검증의 선두주자=맞다고 믿어두자 로산 2012.07.03 1550
3642 what do you mean by keeping sabbath ? choshinja 2012.07.03 2293
3641 이런 박근혜를 보수님들은 어떻게 생각하시는지 13 로산 2012.07.02 2074
3640 삼위일체 4 로산 2012.07.02 1950
3639 한국식 정의 tears 2012.07.02 2438
3638 불쌍한 사람-종북 논쟁 17 로산 2012.07.02 3065
3637 “한-일협정 밀실 처리, 청와대가 지시했다” 프로모션 2012.07.01 2013
3636 국가를 사익추구 모델로 설정한 이넘은 근래 보기 힘든 넘이다.이넘은 도덕적으로 완벽하고 매우 공정한 넘이다 사람들은 이넘을 쥐박이라 부른다. 4 西草타운 2012.06.30 3992
3635 마음을 찌르는 설교 snow 2012.06.29 1980
3634 학교 급식 이데로 좋은가? 단체급식 2012.06.29 2352
3633 [평화의 연찬]『기독교적 고전교육』| 홍순명 교수[목사](삼육대학교 건축학과)|<제16회 연찬>|(사)평화교류협의회 평화교류협의회 2012.06.28 1971
3632 4대강 공사 전후, 사진으로 비교해보니…[4대강은 지금] 습지와 모래톱은 사라지고 호수가 된 강변들 프로모션 2012.06.28 2183
3631 "라면교"를 알아보자. 3 西草타운 2012.06.27 2604
3630 궁금한사항임니다 아시는분 답변바람니다. 1 choshinja 2012.06.27 2135
3629 아~김균장로님 6 유재춘 2012.06.26 2567
3628 아프면 슬프다 3 로산 2012.06.25 2356
3627 “KAL 김현희 여전히 가짜의혹, 증거없이 말 뿐” 1 프로모션 2012.06.25 2123
3626 정의가 강물처럼 흐르기를 바라는 ... 샤다이 2012.06.25 1927
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