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Sun
Rays |
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The path of the Sun across the sky varies
throughout the year. The shape described by the Sun's position,
considered at the same time each day for a complete year, is called
the analemma, and resembles a figure 8, aligned along the North/South
direction. The most obvious variation in the Sun's apparent position
through the year is a North/South swing over 47 degrees of angle,
due to the 23.5 degree tilt of the Earth, but there is an East/West
component as well. The North/South swing in apparent
angle is the main source of seasons on Earth.
History and future of the Sun
The Sun is thought to be a second-generation
star, whose formation may have been triggered by shockwaves from
a nearby supernova. This is suggested by a high abundance of heavy
elements such as iron, gold and uranium in the solar system: the
most plausible ways that these elements could be produced are by
endothermic nuclear reactions during a supernova or by transmutation
via neutron absorption inside a massive first generation star.
Our Sun does not have enough mass to
explode as a supernova, and its mass is below the Chandrasekhar
limit. Instead, in 4-5 billion years it will enter its red giant
phase, its outer layers expanding as the hydrogen fuel in the core
is consumed and the core contracts and heats up. Helium fusion will
begin when the core temperature reaches about 3×108 K. While
it is likely that the expansion of the outer layers of the Sun will
reach the current position of Earth's orbit, recent research suggests
that mass lost from the Sun earlier in its red giant phase will
cause the Earth's orbit to move further out, preventing it from
being engulfed. Following the red giant phase, giant thermal pulsations
will cause the Sun to throw off its outer layers forming a planetary
nebula. The Sun will then evolve into a white dwarf, slowly cooling
over eons. This stellar evolution scenario is typical of low to
medium mass stars.
Human understanding of the Sun
Mankind's most fundamental understanding
of the Sun is as the luminous disk in the heavens whose presence
above the horizon creates day, and whose absence causes night. In
many prehistoric and ancient cultures, the Sun was thought to be
a deity or other supernatural phenomenon.
One of the first people in the Western
world to offer a scientific explanation for the sun was the Greek
philosopher Anaxagoras, who reasoned that it was a giant flaming
ball of metal even larger than the Peleponessus, and not the chariot
of Helios. For teaching this heresy he was imprisoned by the authorities
and sentenced to death (though later released through the intervention
of Pericles).
With respect to the fixed stars, the
Sun appears from Earth to revolve once a year along the ecliptic
through the zodiac. Thus, the Sun was considered by Greek astronomers
to be one of the seven planets (Greek planetes "wanderer"),
after which the seven days of the week are named in some languages. |