HS-ESS1-1: Nuclear Fusion and the Sun's Energy
Develop a model based on evidence to illustrate the life span of the sun and the role of nuclear fusion in the sun’s core to release energy in the form of radiation. (Scale, Proportion, and Quantity)
Clarification Statement: Emphasis is on the energy transfer mechanisms that allow energy from nuclear fusion in the sun’s core to reach Earth. Examples of evidence for the model include observations of the masses and lifetimes of other stars, as well as the ways that the sun’s radiation varies due to sudden solar flares (“space weather”), the 11-year sunspot cycle, and non-cyclic variations over centuries.
Assessment Boundary: Assessment does not include details of the atomic and sub-atomic processes involved with the sun’s nuclear fusion.
Solar Flares
Starry sky and moving stars
Nuclear fusion is the source of Sun's phenomenal energy output. The Hydrogen and Helium atoms that constitute Sun, combine in a heavy amount every second to generate a stable and a nearly inexhaustible source of energy.
Sun – The Ultimate Nuclear Fusion Reactor
Every second, the Sun fuses 620 billion Kg of Hydrogen nuclei (protons) into Helium, to produce 384.6 trillion trillion Joules of energy per second. This is equivalent to the energy released in the explosion of 91.92 billion megatons of TNT per second.
Sun is our star and the source of all energy on Earth. Solar energy sustains all the life on our planet through photosynthesis, and sets the rhythm of our climate and seasons. Since ages, people have pondered about the source of Sun’s extraordinarily high energy output which amounts to 3.846 × 1026 Joules of energy, per second. What endows stars like our Sun with this almost endless energy? Today, thanks to years of painstaking research, we know the answer. Nuclear fusion (the fusing together of atomic nuclei into heavier nuclei at high temperatures) is the key which unlocks almost limitless power for the Sun.
Atomic Weight
Atomic weight is the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus, while atomic number is the number of protons or electrons that make the atom. Hydrogen is denoted as 11H, where the number in the superscript is the atomic weight and the number in subscript is the atomic number. Since the thermonuclear reactions occur at the level of a million Kelvins, all atoms are stripped of their electrons in the solar core.
What is Nuclear Fusion?
Sun is a star and all stars are big balls of gas, primarily made up of gargantuan amounts of Hydrogen and Helium. About 75% of the Sun is made up of Hydrogen, while the rest is mostly all Helium.
What Makes Sun, Stable?
Solar interior witnesses a constant tussle between the crushing gravitational force and thermal pressure, generated by nuclear fusion in the core. The Sun is stable due to the hydrostatic equilibrium achieved between the self-gravity of the Sun and the thermal pressure generated by fusion in the core.