Friday, October 31, 2014

Freaky Fzx Friday - When Our Sun Dies

It makes me smile to know that my little star won't ever become a black hole.
I'm content that scientists understand how stars produce their energy.
And I giggle in wonder because our yellow sun is wonderfully stable.

But it'll die eventually.

Right now the sun is fusing hydrogen into helium in the plasma at its fusion core.  Only in that violent state of matter, where atoms don't exist, can nuclei freely collide and rarely combine.


The process as shown above is oversimplified, but, eventually, the core will run out of hydrogen to fuse (but only if "run out" means that the hydrogen concentration drops below a critical level so the nuclei are too few and too far apart to collide often enough to fuse and release energy.)

Temperature is a measure of the average particle kinetic energy.  More massive particles have lower speeds for the same kinetic energy or temperature.  So if the star is to continue fusion, the temperatures must be higher so nuclei can collide with enough speed to overcome their positive-nucleus-to-positive-nucleus repulsion.

As the temperature in the core drops since not enough fusion energy is being produced, the star begins to shrink.  The gravitational attraction of every particle for every other particle that formed our sun and planets now acts to pull the sun particles closer to each other.

As the sun compresses under huge gravitational forces, particles collide more often, speeds go up, and the  temperature increases.  Hydrogen fusion will shift to the outer layers of the sun and the sun will expand to become a red giant.  After eating Mercury and Venus, our formerly friendly sun will consume the earth.

After its hydrogen fusion phase, the sun will again gravitationally compress and heat up until its temperature is high enough that helium nuclei, the nuclear reaction product of the process pictured above, become the reactants.  And the fusion products are carbon nuclei.


Eventually, of course, the concentration of helium will drop below the critical point and the sun will no longer be able to release energy from helium fusion.  Eventually the sun dies.  But at least it'll never supernova.  And it'll never become a black hole.  But it's thousands of millions of years in the future so I'm not concerned.

Star life cycle in biography form

And in video form:

Friday, October 24, 2014

Freaky Fzx Friday: Sun Power!

Ever so many years ago, people thought the sun was just a huge bonfire, chemically burning fuel.  The chemical equation looked something like this


That's gasoline with oxygen in a car engine.  Complete combustion releases only carbon dioxide and water and that's why your exhaust pipe drips - it's the condensation of a reaction product, not water in the gas or rain water from the last hurricane.

But that process  won't work for the sun.  Oxygen supply is a problem.  Fuel is a problem.  The best it could do under perfect conditions is a few thousand years.  Maybe.  But it just won't work.

And we knew it.  Scientists had no idea where the energy that powered the sun came from until about 1920.  And the average person has no clue either.


Chemical processes are all about the electrons - sharing, trading, transferring, repelling.

Nuclear processes have nothing to do with electrons.  Focus on that teeny tiny part of the atom that you basically ignored in chemistry class - the nucleus.  It has almost all the mass, takes up almost no space, and is freed from its confining electrons in the plasma at the sun center.

The hydrogen nuclei (free protons), moving at unimaginably high speeds, collide with each other constantly and sometimes (rarely) combine to form larger nuclei.  This process continues in our sun until helium nuclei are formed.  The most famous equation in the world governs the energy production since matter is converted into energy.


Without quantum physics, however, even that wouldn't happen since at the fusion core of the sun, it's not hot enough to make the nuclei move fast enough to overcome the proton to proton repulsion.


So the sun ain't no "ball of fire."  It's a huge nucleosynthesizer that fuses hydrogen into helium, converts tiny bits of mass into huge amounts of energy, and keeps us toasty in summer.

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Freaky Fzx Friday - Black Holes

We love our puny yellow sun.  Thousands of millions of years of the same sun with earth at 93 million miles make Earth quite habitable for lots of bugs and a few of us.

Our sun is pretty big,



but wonderfully tiny compared to other local stars.


It's actually unimaginably small. 

Because of its size, our sun will never become that powerhouse of the universe - a black hole.  


This is the process of formation:


and The Ellen Show on Black Holes:


The gravitational field of the black hole, however, is only ridiculously huge at distances much closer than the radius of the former star.  At large distances, the g field is actually weaker since there was a loss of mass.  

But don't get close.  You'd most likely be ripped apart well before you reached the event horizon beyond which even light does not escape.

So when you find a black hole on your summer vacation, run away.  Abandon all hope, ye who enter here.

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Freaky Fzx Friday - Antimatter

Sometimes little boys and little girls never grow up and like to smash things together in particle accelerators (Lrn Fxz) just to see what happens.  Sometimes they get antimatter out of smashing protons together at relativistic speeds.


Yeah, it's crazy.  And really tough to understand.  The existence of antimatter was proposed to exist years before it was experimentally discovered - weird things show up in math solutions and they have meaning - that often happens in modern physics.

And now for another viewpoint on antimatter from one of our favorite authors and YouTube personalities:


I remember eating Mom's homemade pizza every Saturday night while we watched re-runs of the original Star Trek series.  The warp engine supplied all the power for the ship and was based on matter-antimatter annihilation.


It's the best we can do.  All chemical reactions are puny and tiny and weak.  Fission and fusion release tiny bits of energy.  Only matter-antimatter drive engines are capable of putting out the energy required for fake space travel like Star Trek.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Freaky Fzx Friday - Particle Accelerators

We can't verify Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity with human experience since we'll never get people to travel anywhere near the speed of light.  But we can get things moving fast and collide them to see what happens.

Particle Physicists in Training.

We use subatomic particles.  And particle accelerators.


Their operation depends on charged particles so we can't use neutrons. But we can use simple particle accelerators to entertain and educate.


Those electrons are so fast that the engineers have to account for special relativity effects.  That electron gun and the required length of the cathode ray tube give the old TVs their distinctive shape and explain why so few people had big TVs until LCD and plasma screens got cheap.

Here's another early accelerator dubbed the "scary electroball" by a former student


And finally, "5 Things you Should Never Do with a Particle Accelerator"