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The Sun and Other Stars How do stars shine? How are stars layered?
How does the Sun change over short periods of time? How do scientists classify stars?
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How Stars Shine A star is a large ball of gas held together by gravity with a core so hot that nuclear fusion occurs. Nuclear fusion occurs when the nuclei of several atoms combine into one larger nucleus.
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How Stars Shine (cont.) Nuclear fusion releases a large amount of energy. A star shines because when energy leaves a star’s core, it travels throughout the star and radiates into space.
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Composition and Structure of Stars (cont.)
There are three interior layers of a typical star. When first formed, all stars fuse hydrogen into helium in their cores.
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Composition and Structure of Stars (cont.)
The radiative zone is a shell of cooler hydrogen around a star’s core. In the convection zone, hot gases move toward the surface as cooler gases move down into the interior.
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Composition and Structure of Stars (cont.)
Beyond the convection zone are the three layers of a star’s atmosphere— the photosphere, the chromosphere, and the corona.
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Composition and Structure of Stars (cont.)
The photosphere is the apparent surface of a star, where light energy radiates into space.
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Composition and Structure of Stars (cont.)
The chromosphere is the orange-red layer above the photosphere. The corona is the wide, outermost layer of a star’s atmosphere.
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Changing Features of the Sun: Sunspots
Cooler regions of magnetic activity Seem to move as the Sun rotates Number varies on an 11-year cycle Digital Vision/PunchStock
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Changing Features of the Sun: Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs)
Huge gas bubbles ejected from the corona Larger than flares May reach Earth Can cause radio blackouts NASA
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Changing Features of the Sun: Prominences and Flares
Prominences—clouds and jets of gases forming loops into the corona Flares—sudden increases in brightness, often near sunspots or prominences SOHO Consortium, ESA, NASA
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Changing Features of the Sun: The Solar Wind
Caused by charged particles streaming away from the Sun Extends to the edge of the solar system Causes auroras CORBIS
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Groups of Stars Most stars exist in star systems bound by gravity.
Many stars exist in large groupings called clusters. Stars in a cluster all formed at about the same time and are the same distance from Earth.
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Classifying Stars Scientists classify stars according to their spectra. Though there are exceptions, color in most stars is related to mass.
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Blue-white stars tend to have the most mass, followed by white stars, yellow stars, orange stars, and red stars.
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The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram is a graph that plots luminosity against temperature of stars.
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The y-axis of the H-R diagram displays increasing luminosity and the x-axis displays decreasing temperature.
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Most stars exist along the main sequence.
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The mass of a main-sequence star determines both its temperature and its luminosity
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