When we think of the sun
we think of many things, but we generally do not appreciate
it's role in our lives. Indeed, it is much more important
than it often seems. Without the sun, it is unlikely that
life would have ever formed on Earth; nearly all organisms
are highly dependant on the sun and its products for numerous
reasons, a fact which has made Earth the lush, fertile planet
that it is.
[ A Source of Energy
]
Sunlight is the fuel of life, it
provides the energy that maintains nearly every manifestation
of life on Earth. However, this energy is not always obtained
directly. The process of energy dispersion begins with plants
in a reaction called photosynthesis. The most important
component of photosynthesis is light itself. Sunlight, or
white light, consists of all parts of the visible spectrum,
which contains all possible colors. Because only certain parts
of this spectrum are absorbed by plant cells (usually blue
and red), the reflected light gives them their color, which
is generally greenish. In photosynthesis, light is converted
into energy. This absorption and conversion of sunlight occurs
within the chloroplast, a sac-like membrane found in plant
cells. The chloroplast contains chlorophyll and other pigments
which absorb light. The energy provided by the excitation
of electrons in these pigments provokes a reaction that separates
water molecules and produces oxygen. The chemical energy created
by this process is used to produce glucose and other compounds.
Glucose stores a large amount of energy and provides plants
with what they need to survive. Yet the energy in glucose
originates from compounds produced in photosynthesis, a process
that acquires energy directly from light directly from
the sun.
How then, is this energy manifested in organisms
which don't obtain their energy directly from sunlight?
Just as plants acquire energy from the sun,
animals acquire energy from plants. Using oxygen, glucose,
and other sources, animals create the energy they need to
survive. Whereas herbivores acquire this energy directly from
plants, carnivores acquire it from other animals. Thus, the
energy used by nearly all organisms on Earth comes directly
or indirectly from the sun. If the sun did not provide this
energy, it is unlikely that life would be so successfully
exhibited here. It is the consistent, powerful array of energy
provided by sunlight that has instigated the growth and expansion
of life on Earth.
8,000 feet under the surface of the ocean there
is virtually no sunlight. This area, the deep ocean, is very
inhospitable to nearly all forms of life. However, a group
of organisms, including the giant
tube worm, thrive at such depths. They obtain energy from
thermal vents on the sea-bottom and are some of the very few
known organisms which obtain their energy from a source other
than the sun.
[ Other Benefits ]
Reflected light, or light that
is not absorbed by an object, is measured with great accuracy
by humans and most animals. This detection occurs in the eye
and is called visual perception, or sight. The
measurement of reflected light is extremely useful in assessing
one's environment, and most animals rely heavily on their
eyes to survive. The reason that this sense is available to
life on Earth is because the sun provides a great amount of
light, making visual receptors a practical device. If the
sun did not provide this light, we would have to depend more
on other, less efficient means of perception.
The sun also acts as a structurizer
for our solar system. Because it is so massive, the sun has
a gravitational field that exhibits a great force on
the planets orbiting it. This force is what keeps the planets
from traveling in a straight line and prevents them from leaving
their orbit. It is a result of this force and the nearly constant
orbits created by it that days and years are also nearly constant,
which means that reception of sunlight is predictable. This
consistency of environment is a major requirement for life
to be successful.