The Sun's
Energy
The Sun produces an amazing
amount of light and heat through nuclear reactions.
The process that produces the Sun's energy is called
nuclear fusion. In nuclear fusion, two atoms come
together to produce a heavier atom. Fusion reactions
release energy and tiny elementary particles.
Scale of the Sun's
Energy
In just one second the Sun
emits more energy than humans have used in the last
10,000 years. The Sun has been shining relatively
steadily for 4.6 billion years. Until the early 20th
century, humans did not know of any process that
could explain the energy production of the Sun. Even
if a fire, such as those that occur on Earth, were as
large as the Sun, the fire would consume the mass of
the Sun in a few thousand years.
Scientists now know that the Sun is mainly composed
of hydrogen, the lightest and most abundant element
in the universe. The Sun contains an enormous amount
of hydrogen, however, which makes the Sun very
massive. All matter inside the Sun is gravitationally
attracted to all the other matter in the Sun, and
this attraction tends to pull the Sun's mass
together. This inward pull creates high pressures and
temperatures inside the Sun.
The center is so violent and hot that
collisions between atoms break the hydrogen atoms
apart into their subatomic ingredients. A hydrogen
atom is made up of a nucleus that contains a
positively charged proton, and a negatively charged
electron that orbits the nucleus. In the Sun,
collisions separate the electron from the nucleus,
freeing each to move about the solar interior. The
positively charged nuclei, or protons, are called
ions. A gas in which particles are ionized, or have
electric charges, is called plasma. Scientists often
consider plasma, such as the material inside the Sun,
to be a fourth state of matter—the three more
familiar states of matter are gas, liquid, and
solid.
Nuclear Fusion in the
Core

The separation of hydrogen
nuclei from their electrons makes nuclear fusion
possible at the Sun's core, producing the Sun's light
and heat. With their electrons gone, hydrogen nuclei
(protons) can be packed much more tightly than
complete atoms. At great depths inside the Sun, the
pressure of overlying material is enormous, the
protons are squeezed tightly together, and the
material is very hot and densely concentrated. At the
Sun's center, the temperature is 15.6 million degrees
C (28.1 million degrees F), and the density is more
than 13 times that of solid lead. This is hot and
dense enough to make the nuclei fuse together.
Outside the solar core, where the overlying weight
and compression are less, the gas is cooler and
thinner, and nuclear fusion cannot
occur.
The nuclear fusion reaction
that powers the Sun involves four protons that fuse
together to make one nucleus of helium. Two of the
original protons become neutrons (electrically
neutral particles about the same size as protons).
The result is a helium nucleus, containing two
protons and two neutrons. The helium nucleus is
slightly less massive (by a mere 0.7 percent) than
the four protons that combine to make it. The fusion
reaction turns the missing mass into energy, and this
energy powers the Sun.
The relationship between
energy and the missing matter was explained in 1905
by a German-born American physicist Albert Einstein.
The mass loss, m, during the transformation of
four protons into one helium nucleus, supplies an
energy, E, according to the relation E =
mc2, where c is the speed of light.
The speed of light is a constant number equal 3
× 108 m/s (1 × 109
ft/s).
Every second, fusion reactions convert
about 700 million metric tons of hydrogen into helium
within the Sun's energy-generating core. In doing so,
about 5 million metric tons of this matter become
energy. This energy leaves the Sun as radiation, and
the part of this radiation that constitutes visible
light is what makes the Sun shine.
The rate of nuclear reactions in the
Sun is relatively low, because protons repel each
other. This repulsion often prevents them from
getting close enough to each other to fuse. Protons
push each other away because they have the same
electrical charge. The particles must overcome this
repulsion in order to fuse together. Only a tiny
fraction of the protons inside the Sun are moving
fast enough to overpower this repulsive electrical
force. The nuclei that are moving fast enough can get
very close together, and a force called the strong
nuclear force takes over. The strong nuclear force
is, as its name implies, very powerful, but only over
very short distances. It pulls the nuclei together
and holds them together. In this way, nuclear
reactions proceed at a relatively slow pace inside
the Sun. If the pace were much quicker, the Sun would
explode like a giant hydrogen bomb.
The Proton-Proton
Chain
Four protons do not combine directly to
form a helium nucleus, since the protons are
constantly moving and are almost never in the same
place at the same time. Moreover, the electrical
repulsion between four protons is too great to
overcome, even if the four protons happen to come
together at an appropriate speed at the same time.
Instead, the protons come together in a series of
steps to form a helium nucleus, and these steps are
called the proton-proton chain.
In the first step of the proton-proton
chain, two exceptionally fast protons meet head on
and merge into each other, tunneling through the
electrical barrier between them. The two protons
combine, with most of their mass forming a deuteron,
the nucleus of a heavy form of hydrogen known as
deuterium. A deuteron contains one proton and one
neutron, so one of the protons must become a neutron
in this step. The conversion of a proton to a neutron
releases a much smaller particle called a neutrino.
There are several types of neutrinos—the type
that the proton-proton chain produces is called an
electron neutrino. The reaction also creates a
positron, a positively charged particle the size of
an electron. The symbolic representation of the first
step of the proton-proton chain is
p + p
2D + e+ + e
where p
represents the protons, 2D represents
deuterium, e+ represents the positron, and
e represents the electron
neutrino.
In the second step of the chain, the
deuteron collides with another proton to form a
nucleus of light helium, which has two protons and
one neutron. Less energy is needed to maintain a
light helium nucleus than is needed to maintain a
deuteron and a proton separately. The extra energy is
released as a photon, or a packet of light energy. In
symbolic terms, the second step is
2D
+ p 3He + 
where
3He is light helium and
represents a photon.
In the final step of the proton-proton
chain, two light helium nuclei meet and fuse together
to form a nucleus of normal heavy helium, which has
two protons and two neutrons. This reaction also
releases two unattached hydrogen nuclei that return
to the solar gas. In symbolic terms, the third step
is
3He + 3He
4He + 2p
where
4He represents a normal helium nucleus
with two protons and two neutrons.
The positron created in the first step
of the chain eventually collides with a free
electron. The positron and the electron are opposite
particles—the positron is the antimatter
equivalent of the electron. When the positron and the
electron collide, they annihilate each other,
releasing energy. The electron and the positron
disappear, their mass transformed into two
photons:
e+
+ e- 2
where e-
represents the electron. The net result of the
proton-proton chain is the transformation of four
hydrogen nuclei into a helium nucleus (with two
protons and two neutrons), two neutrinos, and six
photons:
4p
4He + 2 e + 6 .
Solar
Neutrinos
The conversion of two protons into two
neutrons in the proton-proton chain produces two
tiny, elusive, fast-moving neutral particles called
neutrinos. Nuclear reactions in the Sun's central
furnace create prodigious quantities of neutrinos.
Every second the Sun releases 2 ×
1038 neutrinos, and every second an
estimated 70 billion of these solar neutrinos pass
through every square centimeter of Earth that is
facing the Sun.
Neutrinos move at the velocity of
light, have no electrical charge, and have so little
mass that scientists are not sure that neutrinos have
any mass at all. The ghostlike neutrinos therefore
travel almost unimpeded through the Sun, Earth, and
nearly any amount of matter. Scientists can snag
small numbers of neutrinos in massive underground
detectors called neutrino telescopes. These
telescopes are placed so deep underground that only
neutrinos can reach them. Scientists using these
telescopes have detected solar neutrinos, confirming
that the Sun is indeed powered by nuclear
fusion.
The number of neutrinos detected by
these telescopes, however, is only one-third to
one-half of the total number of neutrinos predicted
to exist by the theory of solar neutrino production.
This discrepancy between the number of detected
neutrinos and the number predicted is known as the
solar neutrino problem. There are two possible
explanations—scientists might not understand
exactly how the Sun produces its energy, or they
could have an incomplete knowledge of
neutrinos.
Astronomers are convinced that their
models of the Sun are correct and that their
predictions for the expected amount of solar
neutrinos are therefore correct. Studies of the
interior of the Sun substantiate the current models
of how the Sun produces its energy, so most
scientists agree that the problem lies in their
understanding of neutrinos.
One theory posed by scientists to
explain the problem is that neutrinos from the Sun
may change on the way to Earth. Scientists know of at
least three types of neutrinos. Nuclear fusion
reactions in the Sun produce a type of neutrino
called an electron neutrino. The other two proven
types of neutrinos are called muon neutrinos and tau
neutrinos. Most neutrino telescopes, especially those
devoted to solar research, can only detect electron
neutrinos. In the 1990s studies of muon neutrinos
(produced by reactions between particles called
cosmic rays and Earth's atmosphere) showed that muon
neutrinos might change into tau neutrinos. Scientists
believe that electron neutrinos from the Sun may also
change into another type of neutrino. This change
would mean the electron neutrino detectors miss many
of the Sun's neutrinos.
|