Frequently AskedAstronomy


Astronomers have at last found definitive evidence that the universe's first dust - the celestial stuff that seeded future generations of stars and planets - was forged in the explosions of massive stars.

The findings, made with NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, are the most significant clue yet in the longstanding mystery of where the dust in our very young universe came from. Scientists had suspected that exploding stars, or supernovae, were the primary source, but nobody had been able to demonstrate that they can create copious amounts of dust - until now. Spitzer's sensitive infrared detectors have found 10,000 Earth masses worth of dust in the blown-out remains of the well-known supernova remnant Cassiopeia A.

Space dust is everywhere in the cosmos, in our own neck of the universe and all the way back billions of light-years away in our infant universe. Developing stars need dust to cool down enough to collapse and ignite, while planets and living creatures consist of the powdery substance. In our nearby universe, dust is pumped out by dying stars like our sun. But back when the universe was young, sun-like stars hadn't been around long enough to die and leave dust.

That's where supernovae come in. These violent explosions occur when the most massive stars in the universe die. Because massive stars don't live very long, theorists reasoned that the very first exploding massive stars could be the suppliers of the unaccounted-for dust. These first stars, called Population III, are the only stars that formed without any dust.

Sun Statistics

Filed under: Sun — admin @ 10:59 pm
Characteristic Measurement

Mass (kg)

1.989e+30

Mass (Earth = 1)

332,830

Equatorial radius (km)

695,000

Equatorial radius (Earth = 1)

108.97

Mean density (gm/cm^3)

1.410

Mean distance from - (km)

0

Rotational period (days)

25-36*

Escape velocity (km/sec)

618.02

Luminosity (ergs/sec)

3.827e33

Magnitude (Vo)

-26.8

Mean surface temperature

6,000°C

Age (billion years)

4.5

 

Principal Chemistry Percent

Hydrogen

92.1%

Helium

7.8%

Oxygen

0.061%

Carbon

0.030%

Nitrogen

0.0084%

Neon

0.0076%

Iron

0.0037%

Silicon

0.0031%

Magnesium

0.0024%

Sulfur

0.0015%

All others

0.0015%

* The Sun’s period of rotation at the surface varies from approximately 25 days at the equator to 36 days at the poles. Deep down, below the convective zone, everything appears to rotate with a period of 27 days.

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