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Sun Basics - Contenido educativo

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Subido el 28 de mayo de 2007 por EducaMadrid

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NASA Connect segment exploring the basic properties of the sun and its composition. The segment explains what sun spots are and how they effect the solar system.

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The Sun is our nearest star. 00:00:00
It provides us with warmth and light. 00:00:06
We all know that the Sun is important to life on Earth, but few of us have been given a 00:00:08
good description of the Sun and its composition. 00:00:12
Our Sun is an average star, similar to millions of others in the universe, but it's a big 00:00:15
energy machine. 00:00:20
If you could capture the energy the Sun produces in one second, that would supply the United 00:00:22
States with enough energy for the next 13 billion years. 00:00:26
Where does the Sun's power come from? 00:00:30
Good question. 00:00:33
The basic energy source for the Sun comes from nuclear fusion, and this is when mass 00:00:34
particles combine and tons of energy are released. 00:00:38
The core, or innermost part of the Sun, is made of hydrogen. 00:00:42
The Sun is so dense, and its size is so large, that light released from the core takes about 00:00:46
100,000 years to make its way to the surface. 00:00:52
If the Sun were to stop producing energy today, it would take 100,000 years for significant 00:00:55
effects to be felt at the Earth. 00:01:01
Scientists think there is enough hydrogen on the Sun to continue producing energy for 00:01:04
another 7 billion years. 00:01:07
For many centuries, little was known about the Sun. 00:01:10
However, in the early 1600s, the Italian scientist Galileo used a telescope to take a closer 00:01:14
look at the Sun. 00:01:20
He found dark spots that occasionally appeared and drifted across the Sun. 00:01:21
He also noticed that the dark spots on the Sun's surface were constantly changing. 00:01:25
These are called sunspots. 00:01:30
What are sunspots? 00:01:31
Let's find out. 00:01:32
NASA Goddard's Dr. Eric Christian has some answers for us at the Naval Observatory. 00:01:35
It's a blast! 00:01:39
Thanks, Dan. 00:01:40
The Sun is a fascinating place and a brilliant object to observe. 00:01:41
We observe the Sun through telescopes like this one here at the Naval Observatory in 00:01:47
Washington, D.C. 00:01:51
But satellites help us, too. 00:01:52
To get a better understanding of the Sun, let's look at its different parts. 00:01:54
The visible surface of the Sun, that which we can actually see with the human eye, is 00:02:00
called the photosphere. 00:02:05
Temperatures here are around 6,000 degrees Celsius. 00:02:07
The next two outer layers of the Sun's atmosphere are called the chromosphere and the corona. 00:02:10
The corona is actually hotter than the photosphere at temperatures of 1 to 2 million degrees 00:02:15
Celsius. 00:02:19
The corona is visible to the naked eye during solar eclipses. 00:02:20
Remember the dark spots, or sunspots, that Galileo studied with his telescope? 00:02:24
Well, sunspots are dark, cool areas of the Sun's surface where charged particles are 00:02:28
emitted. 00:02:32
The sunspot only looks dark relative to the brightness of the rest of the Sun, but it's 00:02:33
still pretty hot, 4,000 degrees Celsius hot. 00:02:37
The average sunspot is about the same diameter of the Earth. 00:02:40
Sunspots generate some of the most violent storms in the solar system. 00:02:44
When a sunspot erupts, we call this a solar flare. 00:02:48
Solar flares are some of the biggest explosions in the solar system. 00:02:52
When a solar flare occurs, gas heat of more than tens of thousands of degrees and energy 00:02:56
surpassing billions of atomic bombs is hurled out from the Sun. 00:03:01
Another type of explosion is the CME, or coronal mass ejection. 00:03:06
These explosions can reach speeds of millions of kilometers per hour and can reach the Earth 00:03:10
in just three days. 00:03:14
Both solar flares and CMEs can be very disruptive to human activity on Earth and in space as 00:03:17
these storms, we call them solar storms, travel to the Earth. 00:03:23
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Idioma/s:
en
Materias:
Matemáticas
Niveles educativos:
▼ Mostrar / ocultar niveles
      • Nivel Intermedio
Autor/es:
NASA LaRC Office of Education
Subido por:
EducaMadrid
Licencia:
Reconocimiento - No comercial - Sin obra derivada
Visualizaciones:
352
Fecha:
28 de mayo de 2007 - 16:53
Visibilidad:
Público
Enlace Relacionado:
NASAs center for distance learning
Duración:
03′ 27″
Relación de aspecto:
4:3 Hasta 2009 fue el estándar utilizado en la televisión PAL; muchas pantallas de ordenador y televisores usan este estándar, erróneamente llamado cuadrado, cuando en la realidad es rectangular o wide.
Resolución:
480x360 píxeles
Tamaño:
20.85 MBytes

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