Astronomy is a fascinating subject. The study of our breathtaking universe continues to be an important step in my spiritual evolution. Every time I read about new discoveries or view pictures from outer space, I can't help but wonder. Could one entity really be the architect, the invisible hand, the engineering virtuoso behind our vast universe?
Let's start with the sun, at the center of our cozy little solar system neatly tucked away in an obscure corner of the enormous Milky Way galaxy, 100,000 light years across, containing between 200 billion to 400 billion stars. Our sun sits about 93 million miles away from earth. Any closer or farther would mean the end of life. It is maintained at precisely that distance.
The sun is classified as a GV Star and small by cosmic standards. There are much much larger stars out there and yet the total volume of the sun is 1.4 x 1027 cubic meters, enough to fit 1.3 million earths with room to spare. From a human perspective, this is almost unfathomable. Every second, the sun fuses approximately 600 million tons of hydrogen into helium converting about 4 million tons of matter into energy. Each second mind you and this is just a small yellow dwarf star.
Solar energy is created deep within the core of the Sun. It is here that the temperature (15,000,000° C; 27,000,000° F) and pressure (340 billion times Earth's air pressure at sea level) is so intense that nuclear reactions take place.
Sunlight is the primary source of Earth's energy. The source of our power. Sunlight traveling at 186,000 miles per second takes approximately 8 minutes to reach the earth. So powerful is the sun that even from that distance, it can vaporize water. A powerful solar storm can unleash a tidal wave of destruction pulverizing everything from orbiting communication satellites to power grids on the ground. A single powerful storm has the capacity to take civilization as we know it back to the stone ages.
The sun is about 4.5 billion years old. It is slowly but surely dying. As it fades away, it will get progressively hotter and more violent. In about 5 billion years, the sun will enter the red giant phase, its outer layers expanding as the hydrogen fuel in the core is consumed. By this time, life on earth would have been long extinct or perhaps humans would have found a way to exist on other planets. The sun's radius will swell. The inner planets, Mercury, Venus and Earth will be obliterated. As the sun cools down and shrinks into a white dwarf star, the outer planets of our solar system will become cold, dark, hulking masses. Ghostly silhouettes, spinning aimlessly in a once effervescent solar system.
Because our sun is not big enough to explode into a supernova, it is destined to become a white dwarf star. The sun will dim, burning at a tiny fraction of it's former self; no longer able to sustain life. It is said that the sun could remain in the white dwarf stage for a trillion years before the candle is finally extinguished.
Sunday, May 17, 2009
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