Category Archives: sun

What Will Happen?

One of the things that has always fascinated me about public understanding of science is the question that somebody asks, and then immediately apologizes for asking a dumb question. Folks, there is NO such thing as a dumb question, but there are people who think they’ll LOOK dumb by asking something they think everybody but them knows the answer to.

One of those questions is “What’ll happen to the Sun?” Well, it’s a valid one. We’ve all heard that the Sun is about halfway through its life, that it’s about 4.5 billion years old. So, that suggests that in another five and a half billion years, something will happen. But what?

To tell you the truth, that’s a question we’ve been grappling with on this project I’m writing for. The current story is that the Sun will end its days as a white dwarf. Somewhere between now and that time, however, it might go through a giant phase and then a planetary nebula phase before it approaches white dwarfdom.

It’s a nice, orderly progression that satisfies our sense of science marching onward, but is it really going to happen? Maybe yes. Maybe no.

Not exactly what you want to know, is it? Well, science is like that. Based on the best available data, we try to give answers. When the data and models change, then the answers change. It doesn’t mean the original answer was wrong. It just means the data changed what we think is going to happen. If you give somebody directions down to the nearest shopping center or gas station and they come back and tell you that the stores are not there anymore, you weren’t wrong in your directions. You just didn’t know the truth of the matter.

So, what’s the truth of the matter when it comes to talking about the ultimate demise of our star? The current storyline could be written something like this: in about five billion or so years, the Sun will stop burning hydrogen in its core and start burning helium. The outer layers will expand with the added heat that is given off in the nuclear process, and the Sun may well become some sort of giant star. It may engulf Mercury. The orbits of Venus, Earth and possibly Mars could get shifted outward a bit. Then, after some amount of time, the outer atmosphere will blow off, and maybe (maybe!) there will be a planetary nebula surrounding the slowly shrinking (but still very hot) core of what’s left of the Sun. If there’s enough mass left over, the Sun will become a white dwarf.

That all sounds pretty iffy, but that’s the way it goes. Science aims to get us enough data to understand (and explain) these things. Right now the data point toward our Sun going through this set of steps in the far distant future. It’s a great story and I’d love to be around to see it happen!

However, keep in mind that some new data and observations could come in that will change this storyline—maybe subtly, maybe in a big way. That’s the way science works, too. And that is it’s greatest strength!

Music and the Sun

This time of year, when the Sun is (for us in the northern hemisphere) appearing quite low in the sky during its daily journey, can be chilly and raw. Imagine going through a 70-year-long period where the Sun wasn’t very active (i.e. very, very few sunspots, less intense radiation) and as a result, we experienced colder weather throughout the year, no matter where the Sun was in the sky. You’d wonder if we weren’t slipping into an Ice Age or something. Or these days, you might think to yourself “Global warming caused this? Huh?”
Well, the Sun did do go a little wonky back in the mid-1600s and if a couple of scientists have their theories right, one of the unexpected results was an advance in the art of violin-making. To get the whole story, you have to bring together solar physics, earth science, climatology, and violin makers. From these seemingly disparate elements, you get beautiful music!
Between the years 1645 and 1715 the Sun only rarely showed any sunspots (a period of solar history called the Maunder Minimum). The effect on the weather was obvious: long winters and cool summers (particularly in western Europe), that in turn changed growing seasons, food supplies, people’s health and, interestingly enough, on tree rings. Researchers found what looks like a “Maunder Minimum effect” reflected in the tree-ring records from high-elevation forest stands in the European Alps. The frigid winters and cool summers of this 70-year period produced wood that has slow, even growth, which is reflected in the narrow, evenly-spaced tree rings of some European trees of the time. It turns out that these are very desirable properties if you are a producer of quality sounding boards for musical instruments.

Where did I find out about this? I was reading a press release from Columbia University detailing a joint research project between scientists at the Lamont Earth Observatory and the Laboratory of Tree Ring Science at the University of Tennessee. They noticed a correlation between the tree ring sizes, the Maunder Minimum-induced Little Ice Age, and the fact that some of the most beautiful-sounding musical instruments (particularly violins) were created during this time. They wrote in their press release:

“Antonio Stradivari of Cremona, Italy, perhaps the most famous of violin makers, was born one year before the beginning of the Maunder Minimum. He and other violinmakers of the area used the only wood available to them — from the trees that grew during the Maunder Minimum. [Scientists Lloyd Burckle and Henri Grissino-Mayer] suggest that the narrow tree rings that identify the Maunder Minimum in Europe played a role in the enhanced sound quality of instruments produced by the violinmakers of this time. Narrow tree rings would not only strengthen the violin but would increase the wood’s density.

The onset of the Maunder Minimum at a time when the skills of the Cremonese violinmakers reached their zenith perhaps made the difference in the violin’s tone and brilliance. Climate conditions with temperatures such as those that occurred during this time simply can not and do not occur today in areas where the Cremonese makers likely obtained their wood.”

Now this is kind of cool because it’s another example of the what I like to think of as the “interrelatedness” of sciences. Chances are you’d never think that solar physics, earth science, climatology, dendrochronology (the study of tree rings), and music technology would all have anything in common with each other. But, in the grand harmony of the universe, it appears that a star, a planet, climate changes, human hands, and a tree can all act together to produce something that itself produces more beauty and harmony.