Term
What are considered the atoms of the universe? |
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Definition
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Term
What two questions are prompted when we learn that the universe is expanding? |
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Definition
What was it at the time of origin? What fate does the future hold |
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Term
How do we find the sun's size? |
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Definition
Measure its angular size (how big it looks) and determine its distance (by using radar) |
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Term
What is the size of the sun (diameter)? Compared to the earth? |
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Definition
It is 100 times the diameter of the Earth 1.4 million km in diameter |
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Term
how many earths could fit in the sun? |
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Definition
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Term
How we know the surface temperature of the sun? |
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Definition
The colour of the light emitted by the sun tells us surface T |
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Term
What is the sun's surface t? |
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Definition
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Term
Is our sun really hot or cool or average for stars? |
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Definition
It's relatively average, and we know because it's spectrum wavelength is not the hottest nor the coolest. Our sun is white mostly, but a blue star is far hotter |
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Term
How do we find out what the outer surface of the sun is made of? |
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Definition
By examining it's solar spectrum (tells us its 2/3 H, 1/3 He) |
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Term
how we do know the interior composition of the sun? |
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Definition
It's not easy! We have to first consider other things (like mass) before we can make assumptions |
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Term
How do we find the mass of the sun? |
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Definition
by examining how the earth moves in response to the sun's gravity. We ask how massive must the sun be for its gravity to make the earth rtoate at 30km/sec) |
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Term
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Definition
300,000 times the mass of the earth |
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Term
Because the sun is 1m as big as the eart, but only 300,000 as massive, what do we know? |
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Definition
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Term
What does the sun's density tells us about its composition? |
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Definition
That is can't be made of the same material (rock) as the earth |
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Term
how much light does the sun give off? |
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Definition
About 1 kW per square metre |
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Term
What did galileo understand through the behavior of sunspots? (2) |
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Definition
that the sun must rotate (because they move) and that the outer parts of the sun must be fluid (not solid) |
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Term
How do we know the sun's composition hasn't change much in a long time? |
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Definition
Because there have been oceans of liquid water for at least 3 billion years |
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Term
Compared to humans, does the sun produce a lot of energy? |
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Definition
It contains a lot of energy, but only a tiny fraction of it "dribbles" out from the interior. Gram for gram, humans produce far more energy (more than 1000x more) |
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Term
Why do we think the sun should be contracting? |
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Definition
Because the sun's self gravity (the inward pull on all its atoms as they mutually attract each other) makes the sun want to contract to something smaller |
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Term
And if we know the sun isn't shrinking, what is opposing it's self gravity? |
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Definition
We know now its the huge T! Lots of temperature means particles are moving fast, creating pressure and pushing up.
IT could have also been a rigid internal structure, like dart |
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Term
Why could the sun not have a rigid structure? |
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Definition
The gravitation of the sun is so strong it overwhelms all molecular and cystalline bonds |
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Term
What is the interplay between the sun's heat and gravity? |
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Definition
Stars must be really hot to resist the pull of gravity, but it is the inward pull of gravity that makes them hot in the first place |
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Term
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Definition
Because huge clouds of interstellar gas start to contract under the influence of gravity. As they fall inward and collect together, the atoms collide vigorously. They wind up jiggling about furiously - in other words the material has become hot. |
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Term
Describe the conversion of graivty to heat? |
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Definition
Something has energy, gravity forces it to lose it's PE. So that energy is converted into KE and heat |
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Term
Why do stars get progressively hotter as they use up their fuel? |
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Definition
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Term
How hot must the interior of the sun be? |
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Definition
In order to hold up against gravity - must be about 10 m kelvin |
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Term
What does the sun's massive internal T imply? |
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Definition
That all atoms are fully ionized into plasma (even Uranium). The vigour of the collisions strips them all off |
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Term
What is the consequence of complete ionization? |
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Definition
the sun's interior is thousands of tiny fast moving nuclei in a sea of free electrons. Therefore, The gaseous sun acts like a perfect (or ideal) gas' and obeys particularly simple laws! |
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Term
T/F We understand the interior of the sun and the remote stars better than we understand the interior of the earth |
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Definition
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Term
How do we get neutrons stars, pulsars and black holes? |
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Definition
If some force can overcome the huge electric repulsion between electrons --> Then all atoms could be enormously compressed and dense close packed matter |
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Term
how we do consider pressure like a police raid (3)? |
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Definition
Pressure is made up by three things Number of particles - number of policeman charging the door The mass of each particle - how heavy each policeman is Their Speed - how fast they each run at the door |
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Term
What does pressure depend on? |
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Definition
Density of gas (number and mass of particles) and their speeds. |
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Term
What does speed of a gas tell us? |
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Definition
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Term
What did people think about the sun's reactions? |
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Definition
1) They are burning - ordinary chemical reactions (requires fuel) 2) They are slowly contracting using gravity to keep the sun hot (and progressively raise it's temperature) |
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Term
Why could it not simply be burning? |
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Definition
Because they don't have enough fuel to keep it the same for billions of years |
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Term
Explain Kelvin Contraction? |
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Definition
The slow steady shrinkage of the sun, with it's increasing self gravity, would keep it hot. However, the shrinkage would be immeasurably small over the span of recorded history |
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Term
Why did einstein help solve the burning sun problem? |
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Definition
The sun emits a lot of ergs of energy every second (4 X10^33). And by using E=mc2 we learn that the sun is converted its mass into radiant energy at a rate of 4 million metric tonnes a secnod (which is a tiny % of it's overall rate) |
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Term
What does E=Mc2 say about the sun's potential life time?Why is that wrong? |
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Definition
It has enough mass to last about 10 trillion years, but thats wrogn because not all of its mass will get converted to energy. However, if 10% does get converted, it will yield a potential life time of 10 billion years |
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Term
Does the changing mass of the sun affect's the earth orbit? |
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Definition
Weakens, but in a neglible fashion |
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Term
What is important about the sun's stability? |
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Definition
An even luminosity is helpful for the long term stability of our climate and for life on earth. |
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Term
waht do we already know about the sun's stability? |
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Definition
Persistence of life on earth already tells us that it's been stable for quite a while |
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Term
Is the sun like a baloon or snowball? |
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Definition
The sun returns to equilibrium in 15 minutes, therfore it's like the baloon in that it returns to form |
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Term
Why is the sun like a bicycle pump? |
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Definition
When we compress the sun, it leads to increase pressure and thus increased temperature. This increased T leads to more thermonuclear reactions and thus more heat, and more pressure outwards, and it restores the size of the sun |
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Term
What happens if you expand the sun somewhat? |
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Definition
The central temperature falls, fewer nuclear reactions, too little central pressure to withstand teh inward pull of gravity. thee sun quickly shrinks back to original configuration |
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Term
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Definition
Yes, very slowly. It changes as it uses up it's fuel. But its only the same scale as doctor's not worrying about the slow buildup of plaque during a given blood pressure test. Over a short timescale, the sun won't change (like millions of years) |
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Term
What happens to stars when they are really old? |
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Definition
They run out of fuel, begin to vary in brightness, pulsating like a beating heart. Within a day, the stars could double in brightness |
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Term
What is important about the binding energy curve? |
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Definition
From H to Fe, all fusion reactions release energy. From Fe onwards, the curve slopes down and all fission reactions are exergonic. |
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Term
What's easier, fission or fusion? |
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Definition
Fission, because it doesn't require insanely high temperatures |
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Term
What are the problems with fission? |
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Definition
We do it in pickering like reactors, but it's toxic or long lived radioactive, and has many waste products. Positives, it doesn't use greenhouse gases and does not gobble up fuel supply |
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Term
Describe the process of neutron fission? |
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Definition
Control is the key! you need to send one neutron at a nucleus, and then it begins to decay by sending off more neutrons. these sent off neutrons begin the process of decay for others atoms. so really, its a bomb where one thing leads to detenation of the others |
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Term
Why is it hard to have fusion reactors? |
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Definition
How do you contain a million degree gas? |
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Term
Why do you need high T for fusion |
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Definition
There needs to be a force to voercome the electromagnetic repulsions between nuclei. AT high speeds nuclei come close enough together for teh strong force to bind them together |
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Term
Why are atomic bombs uncontrolled? |
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Definition
You only need a critical msass of material close together. A supercritical mass leads to runaway reactions caused by escaped neutrons |
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Term
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Definition
They use fission reactions to create the neccessary heat for H fusion to occur. They release much more energy (when you consider the binding energy curve) |
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Term
Why don't the reactions in the sun need to be confined? |
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Definition
The enormous self gravity of the sun holds it together. There is no way for the fuel to escape so the nuclear reactions just keep tickign wawy in the hot central regions. |
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Term
Why does the PP chain happen the way it does? |
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Definition
Because multiple protons colliding at the same time is nearly impossible, but just two colliding into each other is more likely. So it happens in steps in order to increase frequency |
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Term
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Definition
Two protons combine - forms a deuteron. The proton fusion leads to release of a positron through Beta decay. Then another proton is added (He isotope). Then two He isotope fuse (and remove two more protons) to from a full helium nucleus. In the end, its 4 protons forming a helium nucleus and it releases a ton of energy |
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Term
How do we form neutrinos? |
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Definition
Convert a neutron to proton (get also an electron), but they don't follow law of conservation of linear momentum. Neutrino is hypothesized molecule that follows classical physics (and has be proven to exist). Note a positron is created when going the other way, from proton to neutron (also to keep charge) |
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Term
What is the antimatter particle of an electron? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens when electrons and positrons meet? |
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Definition
They will anihilate each other and their mass is converted into pure radiant energy (via gamma rays) |
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Term
What is the practical use of Positrons? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Essentially, you give a radioactive tracer. The tracer may get bound in up in cancerous cell (With high metabolic activity) and begin to decay. It's decay will produce positrons, who will immediately annihilate electrons. the subsequent Gamma rays produced can leave directly through the skull without interfering with matter, and can be detected. The manner in which they exit the body can be examined and a better analysis of the tumorous body can be created |
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Term
What is the slowest link in the PP process? |
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Definition
the first one! an average proton takes 14 billion years to combine with another one .Conversely, deuterium is consumed almost instantaneously |
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Term
Why are there different times in the PP process? |
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Definition
Because there are different probabilities of interacting (more like to get two larger masses than two smaller ones) |
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Term
Because of the time each step takes in the PP process,what do we know? |
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Definition
that a typical hydrogen nucleus has a long life in the core of the sun
There will be very little deuterium because it gets consumer so quickly once it is created |
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Term
Is the PP cycle the only way we get energy (heat)? |
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Definition
No, there are many other small PP chains (including BE, Li and B) not to mention the CNO cycle |
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Term
When do we get CNO cycles? |
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Definition
When stars have the heavier atoms presents, they can form the independant reaction cycle |
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Term
Whats the net effect of the CNO Cycle? |
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Definition
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Term
What do C,N,O act as in the CNO cycle? |
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Definition
They act as modified catalysts because they speed up the reaction cycle but they themselves are left unchanged |
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Term
Why is it harder to do the CNO cycle than the PP cycle? |
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Definition
You have to slam a porton into a nucleus of C or N ,rather than into anotehr proton. C and N have lots of protons, and therefore there is a large amount of electrostatic repulsion |
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Term
Becuase of the repulsion between a C and a proton, what is required for the CNO cycle? |
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Definition
Lots and lots and lots of heat. In fact, the CNO cycle is dependnat to the 17th factor on Temperature, where the PP cycle is dependant to the 4th factor. On hotter planets, you get more of the CNO cycle |
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Term
What are two problems we face when examinig the reactions in the sun? |
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Definition
1) WE can't see into the centre of the sun 2) The brightness of the sun now only tells us how vigorous the reactions were some time ago |
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Term
Why do photons take so much longer to leave the sun's centre than expected? |
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Definition
They perform a random walk, essentially bouncing off of everything and anything on their way out |
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Term
Because we can't test photons, what do we do to probe the sun's interior? |
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Definition
The photon does a random walk, therefore it doesn't comes straight out of the deep interior. We need somethings that's much more direct. OR we can use seismic stud to measure the ways in which the sun is vibrating |
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Term
How did we discover neutrinos? |
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Definition
First theoretically. WE know that a neutron forms a proton and electron. However, they move in similar directions (which would disregard the laws of conservation of momentum) so a third particle has to be formed (A neutrino) to balance out this equation |
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Term
What are the characteristics of a neutrino? |
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Definition
Uncharged, low mass, and elusive (barely interacts with other matter) |
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Term
Which two ways are neutrinos formed? |
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Definition
In spontaneous beta decays (like uranium) and in nuclear reactions (either in reactors or naturally in the sun) |
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Term
What is the main problem with neutrinos |
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Definition
It seems impossible to detect them. Though they are not rare, they travel through all matter (and the earth) |
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Term
We had to prove neutrinos existed, how did we do this? |
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Definition
First, we used nuclear reactors and examined what happened when we turned them on and off (because nuclear reactors produced neutrinos). We attached a specialised detector that can see a tiny fraction of them (and in 1956 this was successful) |
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Term
What are the issues with finding solar neutrinos? |
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Definition
We have to eliminate all otehr sources of noise, the things that aren't the sun but may trigger a detector |
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Term
Who first tried to detect solar neutrinos |
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Definition
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Term
How did ray davis experiment work? |
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Definition
He created a tank containing 100,000 gallons of cleaning fluid deep in a mine. Then he flooded the chamber with water before starting to detect neutrinos. Rarely, a neutrino hits a chlorine and converts it to argon. Then, after a few months, you collect th eargon and determine it's relative prevalence. |
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Term
What was unexpected about the ray davis experiment? |
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Definition
We only got 40% of the amount of neutrinos that we predicted |
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Term
What was not ideal about the experiment (4)? |
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Definition
Not time sensitive, no directionality, there are more efficient ways to capture neutrinos, it captures only one kind of neutrinos |
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Term
could there possibly be fewer neutrinos? how? |
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Definition
If it was cooler, and could be held up not by pressure but by srong magentic fields and rapid rotation |
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Term
What about neutrino flavors? could that have affected the experiment? |
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Definition
Davis experiment was only set up to detect one type, but apparently they may mix and turn into other forms he didn't detect. |
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Term
What were two good recent neutrino experiements? |
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Definition
Kamiokande and the SNO experiment |
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Term
Describe the SNO experimetn |
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Definition
Enormous vessel filled with heav water. It's mae of transparent plastic. When a neutrino passes through, there is a chance it will interact with one of the deuterons. This will lead to an electron being ejected and moving in the same direction as the neutrino itself - and it will move faster than the speed of light in water. The photomultipliers detect the flash of light and indicate the directio nfrom which the neutrinos came. |
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Term
What was there directionality in the SNO? Time discrimination? Sensitivity? |
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Definition
The flashlight cone points in the direction the neutrino was travelling. Teh photomultipiers record the precise moment the flash was seen, so we know how steady the neutrino rate was. And deuterons are quite efficient neutrino detectors, much better than Cl atoms in the ray davis experiment. SNO detected a few dozen per day, while ray davis got one per day. LAslty, they can detect all flavors of neutrinos |
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Term
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Definition
Helioseismology utilizes waves that propagate throughout the Sun to measure, for the first time, the invisible internal structure and dynamics of a star. |
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Term
What can you use doppler shifts for? |
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Definition
MEasure them at various points on the sun Then you consider the overtones that are produced. |
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Term
What is does helioseismology do for us? |
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Definition
Confirms the correctness of the standard solar model, and resolves also the neutrino problems |
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Term
Describe some aspects of the sun solar activity? |
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Definition
Flares, sunspots, spicules, chromospheres |
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Term
What type of motion does the sun use? |
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Definition
Convective motion (heating through wind movement) |
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Term
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Definition
They are cooler than the surrounding regions |
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Term
Why don't sunspots collapse? |
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Definition
They do, but are temporarily held up by their different magnetic field! They come and go in an inconsistent manner |
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Term
Do chickenpox move about? |
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Definition
No, and so do sun spots. Some appear first on the abdomen and then spread to alomst everywhere else on the body |
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Term
Describe the sunspot pattern? Why like this? |
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Definition
They form in a given location, at a non-middle latitude, and then persist for a while. The new spots form later, but tend to be closer to the equator.
It forms like this because there is different rotational times for the equator than the poles. They exist on a rotational timescale. First you get the ones at the poles, and then some form at centre (not the same spots). Eventually, the magnetic field gets super tangles and resets (but reverse poles) every 11 years. So we should see the same sunspots every 22 years |
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Term
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Definition
Because of magnetic field lines |
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Term
What does the magnetic field do? |
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Definition
The ionised gas is not free to move with complete liberty in the magnetic field, and this resistance provides an extra 'buoyancy' |
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Term
How do we know sunspots are correlated with magentic fields? |
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Definition
the presence of the magnetic field is deduced from the behavious of absorption lines in the light emitted by the sunspot regions. The magnetic field there is several hundred times the strength of the overall field of the sun |
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Term
Why is there an 11 year periodicity? |
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Definition
The magentic fields get so scrambled that every 11 years they start over (but in opposite direction) Actually a 22 year series |
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Term
What kind of magnet is the sun's magnet like? |
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Definition
Like a bar magent, where magnetic field lines move frmo bottom to top |
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Term
What are the long timescale effect of sunspots? |
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Definition
Only in the 1600s, the maunder minimum |
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Term
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Definition
Because its an average star that is close by |
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Term
How bright does the average star look in comparison to the sun? But how far is that average star? |
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Definition
about 1/10^12 as bright about a million times as far away |
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Term
What does the average star brightness and distance tell us about the sun? |
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Definition
THat the sun is actually quite an average star |
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Term
How close is the nearest star? |
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Definition
4.2 Light years (40 trillion km) |
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Term
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Definition
Per average, they move at about 30km/sec. At this speed it would take about 30,000 years to reach the nearest star |
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Term
Would stars ever collide? |
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Definition
Yea, potentially they could. But more likely not. Because it would be so random. However, there are binary stars that interact and depend on each other. |
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Term
In what do stars "not ignore" another? |
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Definition
Each one moves under the combined gravitational influence of all the material in the Milky Way galaxy - the other stars, gas dust and dark matter |
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Term
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Definition
Stars that are literally in contact and share a mutual gravitational orbit |
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Term
What is tangential motion? ANd radial motion? |
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Definition
Tangential motion is the changing of a star's position among the constellations. Radial motion is changes of the distance betweeen us and the star |
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Term
How do find radial velocity of a star? |
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Definition
It only requires one observation, by spreading the light out into a spectrum, then measuring the doppler shift of the absorption lines . |
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Term
Combining radial and tangential motion, what do we get? |
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Definition
We find out the sun's or the earths motion. |
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Term
Is colour affected by distance? |
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Definition
No, it always tells us the temperature of the stars |
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Term
Do cool stars look bluer or redder? |
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Definition
More red - longer wavelength and less energy |
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Term
What does a spectra of the stars tell us? |
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Definition
Doesn't tell us about compositional differences, but rather differences in temperature. O and B type stars are hot, and M type stars are cold |
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Term
Are all red stars actually super cool? |
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Definition
not necessarily. There might be fog that impairs the color. Though, this impairment only happens in one direction (makes the stars appear cooler) |
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Term
What can we study without knowing the distance of a star? |
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Definition
Position and motion (radial/tangential) Colour and T (spectra) Composition RAte of rotation, strength of magnetic field |
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Term
What is the proper motion of a star?
why is it called proper? |
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Definition
It is the vector between the sun's current position and the star's tangential motion (has nothing to do with radial velocity).
Proper because it is only supposed to based on the star alone. |
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