What is the Sun Like?
The sun is a star. Though the sun is about 93 million miles away, it is our main source
of heat and light, as well as the source of most of our other forms of energy.
Without the sun, there would be no green plants, and without green plants there
would be no food for other living things.
Because the
sun is the nearest of all the stars, it appears larger and brighter than the
others. Actually, the sun is only a medium-sized star. Yet the diameter of the
sun is over 100 times greater than the earth's diameter. If the sun were hollow,
there would be room inside it for more than a million earths. The sun is much
hotter than anything you can imagine. Scientists believe that near the center
its temperature must be more than 20 million degrees F. At such a temperature,
materials cannot exist in a solid or a liquid state. Not even gases can keep
their ordinary properties. The sun's gases include large amounts of hydrogen,
smaller amounts of helium, and much smaller amounts of oxygen, nitrogen, carbon,
neon, and other elements.
The surface
of the sun is not equally bright all over. If you look at the sun through a
piece of dark glass, you can often see dark spots on its surface. Telescopes
show even more of these dark spots. Scientists call these dark places sunspots.
the sunspots appear dark because they are cooler than the areas around them.
They vary greatly in size. Some are no more than 500 miles in diameter, while
others are more than 50,000 miles across. Sometimes the sunspots form groups
that cover areas of several billion square miles. Scientists have not yet
discovered what causes sunspots, but they do know that sunspots occur in cycles
of about eleven years in length. During this period, the sunspots increase in
number up to a certain point, and then they decrease in number. Often when there
are large numbers of sunspots, telephone, radio, and even some other kinds of
communications on the earth are severely disturbed. They also affect the working
of magnetic compasses. Some scientists think that sunspots may even affect our
weather.
For many
years scientists could not understand how the sun could keep on giving out
enormous amounts of energy. If the sun were burning, it would have burned itself
out long ago. Scientists now know that the sun produces heat and light by
releasing atomic energy from some of its elements. Heat can be obtained from
atomic energy. In atomic fission, large atoms such as uranium atoms split
into smaller atoms. Another way that atomic energy is released is when small
atoms, such as hydrogen, come together and fuse to make larger atoms. This is
called atomic fusion. Huge amounts of heat and light are produced as a
result of fusion. Most of the sun's energy seems to be produced when hydrogen
atoms combine to form helium. Scientists think that this process of releasing
atomic energy has been going on in the sun for several billion years and will
probably go on for more than ten billion years.
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