Interesting Facts About the Sun
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Think
you know everything there is to know about the Sun? Think again. Here
are 10 interesting facts about the Sun, collected in no particular
order. Some you might already know, and others will be totally new to
you. Interesting facts after the break...
1.
The Sun is the Solar System.
We live on the planet, so we think it's an equal member of the
Solar System. But that couldn't be further from the truth. The reality
is that the mass of the Sun accounts for 99.8% of the mass of the Solar
System. And most of that final 0.2% comes from Jupiter. So the mass of
the Earth is a fraction of a fraction of the mass of the Solar System.
Really, we barely exist.
2. And the Sun is mostly
hydrogen and helium.
If
you could take apart the Sun and pile up its different elements, you'd
find that 74% of its mass comes from hydrogen. with 24% helium. The
remaining 2% is includes trace amounts of iron, nickel, oxygen, and all
the other elements we have in the Solar System. In other words, the
Solar System is mostly made of hydrogen.
3. The Sun is pretty
bright.
We know of some
amazingly large and bright stars, like Eta Carina and Betelgeuse. But
they're incredibly far away. Our own Sun is a relatively bright star. If
you could take the 50 closest stars within 17 light-years of the Earth,
the Sun would be the 4th brightest star in absolute terms. Not bad at
all.
4. The Sun is huge, but
tiny.
With a diameter of
109 times the size the Earth, the Sun makes a really big sphere. You
could fit 1.3 million Earths inside the Sun. Or you could flatten out
11,990 Earths to cover the surface of the Sun. That's big, but there are
some much bigger stars out there. For example, the biggest star that we
know of would almost reach Saturn if it were placed inside the Solar
System.
5. The Sun is middle
aged.
Astronomers think
that the Sun (and the planets) formed from the solar nebula about 4.59
billion years ago. The Sun is in the main sequence stage right now,
slowly using up its hydrogen fuel. But at some point, in about 5 billion
years from now, the Sun will enter the red giant phase, where it swells
up to consume the inner planets – including Earth (probably). It will
slough off its outer layers, and then shrink back down to a relatively
tiny white dwarf.
6. The Sun has layers.
The Sun looks like a burning ball of fire,
but it actually has an internal structure. The visible surface we can
see is called the photosphere, and heats up to a temperature of about
6,000 degrees Kelvin. Beneath that is the convective zone, where heat
moves slowly from the inner Sun to the surface, and cooled material
falls back down in columns. This region starts at 70% of the radius of
the Sun. Beneath the convection zone is the radiative zone. In this
zone, heat can only travel through radiation. The core of the Sun
extends from the center of the Sun to a distance of 0.2 solar radii.
This is where temperatures reach 13.6 million degrees Kelvin, and
molecules of hydrogen are fused into helium.
7. The Sun is heating
up, and will kill all life on Earth.
It feels like the Sun has been around
forever, unchanging, but that's not true. The Sun is actually slowly
heating up. It's becoming 10% more luminous every billion years. In
fact, within just a billion years, the heat from the Sun will be so
intense that liquid water won't exist on the surface of the Earth. Life
on Earth as we know it will be gone forever. Bacteria might still live
on underground, but the surface of the planet will be scorched and
uninhabited. It'll take another 7 billion years for the Sun to reach its
red giant phase before it actually expands to the point that it engulfs
the Earth and destroys the entire planet.
8. Different parts of
the Sun rotate at different speeds.
Unlike the planets, the Sun is great big
sphere of hydrogen gas. Because of this, different parts of the Sun
rotate at different speeds. You can see how fast the surface is rotating
by tracking the movement of sunspots across the surface. Regions at the
equator take 25 days to complete one rotation, while features at the
poles can take 36 days. And the inside of the Sun seems to take about 27
days.
9. The outer atmosphere
is hotter than the surface.
The surface of the Sun reaches temperatures of 6,000 Kelvin.
But this is actually much less than the Sun's atmosphere. Above the
surface of the Sun is a region of the atmosphere called the
chromosphere, where temperatures can reach 100,000 K. But that's
nothing. There's an even more distant region called the corona, which
extends to a volume even larger than the Sun itself. Temperatures in the
corona can reach 1 million K.
10. There are spacecraft
observing the Sun right now.
The most famous spacecraft sent to observe the Sun is the
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, built by NASA and ESA, and launched
in December, 1995. SOHO has been continuously observing the Sun since
then, and sent back countless images. A more recent mission is NASA's
STEREO spacecraft. This was actually two spacecraft, launched in October
2006. These twin spacecraft were designed to watch the same activity on
the Sun from two different vantage points, to give a 3-D perspective of
the Sun's activity, and allow astronomers to better predict space
weather.
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