Tuesday, November 20, 2007

The Sun may be smaller than thought

The Sun may be smaller than we thought, a new study argues.If correct, then other properties of the Sun such as its internal temperature and density may be slightly different than previously calculated. Understanding the Sun's interior is important as it might help scientists make predictions about space weather and answer questions about the solar system.The Sun has no solid surface. Its atmosphere merely gets thinner and more transparent farther from its centre.Instead the Sun's "surface" is defined to be the depth in the Sun's atmosphere where it becomes opaque to light. Scientists measure this by observing the Sun with telescopes and measuring the distance between the centre of the Sun's disc and its "edge" – the place where its brightness suddenly drops off. This gives a radius of 695,990 kilometres, or about 109 times the radius of Earth... NewScientist

No comments: