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单词 sun
释义

sun


sun

a star that is the source of light and heat for planets in the solar system; the luminous celestial body the earth and other planets revolve around: We warmed ourselves in the sun.
Not to be confused with:son – a male human offspring: My dad always wanted a son.

sun

S0559800 (sŭn)n.1. often Sun The star around which Earth and other planets orbit. It provides heat and light to Earth. It has a mean distance from Earth of about 150 million kilometers (93 million miles), a diameter of approximately 1,391,000 kilometers (864,000 miles), and a mass about 333,000 times that of Earth.2. A star that is the center of a planetary system.3. The radiant energy, especially heat and visible light, emitted by the sun; sunshine.4. A sunlike object, representation, or design.v. sunned, sun·ning, suns v.tr. To expose to the sun's rays, as for warming, drying, or tanning.v.intr. To expose oneself or itself to the sun.Idioms: in the sun In the public eye. under the sun On the earth; in the world.
[Middle English, from Old English sunne; see sāwel- in Indo-European roots.]

sun

(sʌn) n1. (Astronomy) the star at the centre of our solar system. It is a gaseous body having a highly compressed core, in which energy is generated by thermonuclear reactions (at about 15 million kelvins), surrounded by less dense radiative and convective zones serving to transport the energy to the surface (the photosphere). The atmospheric layers (the chromosphere and corona) are normally invisible except during a total eclipse. Mass and diameter: 333 000 and 109 times that of earth respectively; mean distance from earth: 149.6 million km (1 astronomical unit). 2. (Astronomy) any star around which a planetary system revolves3. (Physical Geography) the sun as it appears at a particular time or place: the winter sun. 4. (General Physics) the radiant energy, esp heat and light, received from the sun; sunshine5. a person or thing considered as a source of radiant warmth, glory, etc6. (Heraldry) a pictorial representation of the sun, often depicted with a human face7. (Poetry) poetic a year or a day8. (Poetry) poetic a climate9. archaic sunrise or sunset (esp in the phrase from sun to sun)10. (Pathology) catch the sun to become slightly sunburnt11. place in the sun a prominent or favourable position12. (Nautical Terms) shoot the sun take the sun nautical to measure the altitude of the sun in order to determine latitude13. (Pathology) touch of the sun slight sunstroke14. under the sun beneath the sun on earth; at all: nobody under the sun eats more than you do. vb, suns, sunning or sunned15. (Physiology) to expose (oneself) to the sunshine16. (Physiology) (tr) to expose to the sunshine in order to warm, tan, etc[Old English sunne; related to Old High German sunna, Old Frisian senne, Gothic sunno] ˈsunˌlike adj

sun

(sʌn)

n., v. sunned, sun•ning. n. 1. (often cap.) the star that is the central body of the solar system, around which the planets revolve and from which they receive light and heat: its mean distance from the earth is about 93 million miles (150 million km), its diameter about 864,000 miles (1.4 million km), and its mass about 330,000 times that of the earth. 2. this star with reference to its position in the sky, the temperature it produces, the time when it is seen, etc. 3. the heat and light from the sun; sunshine: to be exposed to the sun. 4. a self-luminous heavenly body; star. 5. a figure or representation of the sun, as a heraldic bearing surrounded with rays and marked with human facial features. 6. something likened to the sun in brightness, splendor, etc. 7. sunrise or sunset: to travel from sun to sun. 8. Archaic. a. a day. b. a year. v.t. 9. to expose to the sun's rays. 10. to warm, dry, etc., in the sunshine. v.i. 11. to expose oneself or be exposed to the rays of the sun. Idioms: under the sun, on earth; anywhere. [before 900; Middle English sun, sonne, Old English sunne, c. Old Frisian sunne, Old Saxon, Old High German, Old Norse sunna, Gothic sunno; akin to Old Norse sōl, Gothic sauil, Latin sōl, Greek hḗlios]

Sun.

Sunday.
suncutaway diagram of the sun

sun

(sŭn)1. Often Sun The star that is orbited by all of the planets and other bodies of our solar system and that supplies the heat and light that sustain life on Earth. It has a diameter of about 864,000 miles (1,390,000 kilometers), an average distance from Earth of about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers), and a mass about 330,000 times that of Earth. See Table at solar system. See Note at dwarf star.2. A star that is the center of a system of planets.

Sun

See also astronomy; climate; cosmology; equator; light; planets; weather.
celidographyArchaic. a description of the surface markings on a planet or the spots on the sun.coronagraphythe observation of the corona of the sun by use of a telescope modifled to simulate an eclipse. — coronagraphic, adj.heliodonan instrument used in astronomy to show the apparent movement of the sun.heliography1. the measurement of the duration and intensity of sunlight.
2. the system or process of signaling by reflecting the sun’s rays in a mirror.
3. an early photographic process involving coated metal plates exposed to sunlight. — heliographer, n. — heliographic, heliographical, adj.
heliolatrythe worship of the sun. — heliolator, n.heliologyArchaic. the science of the sun. — heliologist, n.heliomaniaan abnormal love of the sun.heliophobia1. an abnormal fear of sunlight.
2. an avoidance of sunlight.
helioseismologythe study of motions of the solar surf ace.heliotherapya method of treating illness by exposure to the rays of the sun.pyrheliometeran instrument for measuring the intensity of the sun’s radiation. — pyrheliometric, adj.radiometeran instrument for measuring the intensity of radiant energy, composed of vanes which rotate at speeds proportionate to the intensity of the energy source. — radiometric, adj.radiometrythe measurement of radiant energy by means of a radiometer. — radiometric, adj.radiophonythe transformation of radiant energy into sound.siriasis1. sunstroke.
2. Obsolete, a sun bath or exposure to the sun for curative purposes.
solarism1. the explanation of myths by reference to the sun or the personifi-cation of the sun, as the hero as sunfigure.
2. an overreliance on this method of interpretation. — solarist, n.
solariuma room designed and situated so as to receive the maximum amount of sunlight.

Sun

 

See Also: MOON, SKY, SUNSET

  1. The afternoon sunlight was like gold embroidery on the grass —Paul Horgan
  2. Autumn sunlight poured out over the rock [of Quebec] like a heavy southern wine —Willa Cather
  3. Bars of sunlight crossed the backyard like the bars of a bright strange cell —Carson McCullers
  4. Bits of sunlight bright as butterflies —Eudora Welty
  5. The citronade of the pale morning sun shimmered like a multitude of violins —Angela Carter
  6. The daylight-saving sunshine lay like custard on the oaks and mistletoe —Wallace Stegner
  7. The fast-setting sun lighted the tops of the trees like flames of candles —Z. Vance Wilson
  8. The heat from the scorching [California] sun hit them like a knock-out punch —Jilly Cooper
  9. The high sun fell like balm on her body —Mary Hedin
  10. The huge sun light flamed like a monstrous dahlia with petals of yellow fire —Oscar Wilde
  11. It [sunlight] licks thick as a tongue at my skin —Sharon Sheehe Stark
  12. The last of the sun [at dusk] like a great splash of blood on the sky —George Garrett
  13. The muffled sunlight gleamed like gold tissue through grey gauze —Edith Wharton
  14. The new morning sun shone like a pink rose in the heavens —Kenneth Koch
  15. A pale sun appeared over the clouds like an invalid sitting up in bed —John Mortimer
  16. A red sun as flat and still against the sky as moonlight on pond water —Charles Johnson
  17. The red sun was pasted on the sky like a wafer —Anon
  18. The rising sun is like a ball of blood —Robert W. Service
  19. A scarlet sun, round and brilliant as a blooded egg yolk —Cynthia Ozick
  20. A sharp-as-needle sun sat high over Virginia … like a heathen god, sure of itself —Thomas Keneally
  21. The sinking sun hung like a red balloon over the Hudson River—Belva Plain
  22. The strong sun (of late April) pours down as though a gigantic golden basin full of light and wind were being emptied on us —Erich Maria Remarque
  23. The sun advanced on the city and lit the topmost spines of the hill, painting the olive drab slopes in crazy new colors, like the drawing of a spangled veil —William Brammer
  24. Sun … as light and dry as old sherry —Raymond Chandler

    See Also: DRYNESS, LIGHTNESS

  25. The sun, as red as a furnace on the edge of the horizon —Émile Zola
  26. The sun blazed like a flaming bronze mirror —Bernard Malamud
  27. The sun breaks [over the land] like a cracked egg —T. Coraghessan Boyle
  28. The sun breaks through the cloud like revelation —Delmore Schwartz
  29. The sun burned feebly through the mist like a circle cut from Christmas paper —MacDonald Harris
  30. The sun dazzled off the asphalt in fragments like breaking glass —George Garrett
  31. The sun drew strength from them like a giant sponge —Caryl Phillips
  32. The sun … drops on our heads like a stone —Marge Piercy
  33. The sun, dull, like the face of an old man —Maxim Gorky

    See Also: DULLNESS

  34. The sun fades like the spreading of a peacock’s tail —John Ashbery
  35. The sun fell thick as a blanket —Lee Smith
  36. The sun flared in the sky, fat and red as a tangerine —T. Coraghessan Boyle

    A variation by Marge Piercy: “The sun hangs like a tangerine.”

  37. The sun flashed like a torrent of warm white wine —Du Bose Heyward
  38. The sun floats up above the horizon, like a shimmering white blimp —Margaret Atwood
  39. The sun hangs overhead like a lantern —T. Coraghessan Boyle
  40. The sun hits him like a slap in the face —T. Coraghessan Boyle
  41. The sun … shone like a polished brass knob —Helen Hudson
  42. The sun hung in the cloudless sky like an unblinking yellow eye —Harvey Swados
  43. (It was a misty autumn morning,) the sun just struggling through like a great chrysanthemum —Pamela Hansford Johnson
  44. The sun lay like a friendly arm across her shoulder —Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
  45. The sun … lay on the horizon like a dissolving orange suffused with blood —John Hawkes
  46. The sunlight dripped over the house like golden paint over an art jar —F. Scott Fitzgerald
  47. Sunlight dropped into it (the dark foliage) like a drizzle of gold —Isak Dinesen
  48. Sunlight fell like a shower of gold through the leaves of the chestnut trees —Silvia Tennenbaum
  49. The sunlight hit her like a boxing glove —Jilly Cooper
  50. The sunlight … plunged like tiny knives into my already bleary eyes —James Crumley
  51. Sunlight splashed through the trees, the beams hazy like shafts of light filtered through stained glass —Robert J. Serling
  52. Sunlight that was like a bright driving summer rain —Paule Marshall
  53. Sun (is sitting atop the trees) like a big round cheddar —T. Coraghessan Boyle
  54. The sun looks, through the mist, like a plum on the tree of heaven, or a bruise on the slope of your belly —William H. Gass
  55. The sun lulled in the sky like a mule —Larry McMurtry
  56. The sun overhead beat the surface of the pool like a drum —James B. Hall
  57. The sun peeping above the trees, looked like a giant golf ball —P. G. Wodehouse

    Wodehouse was known for his golf stories so this is a particularly apt comparison for him.

    See Also: GOLF

  58. The sun … poised like a ball of fire on the very edge of the mountains —Henry Van Dyke
  59. The sun popped over the edge of the prairie like a broad smiling face —Willa Cather
  60. The sun poured down like fire —Isaac Bashevis Singer
  61. Sun … reflected back to me like a shiny bedspread whose design is hundreds of wind-driven roller coasters —Richard Brautigan
  62. The sun rested like a warm palm on the back of her neck —Francis King
  63. The sun rolled over the horizon like the red rim of a wagon wheel —Rita Mae Brown
  64. The sun … rose swiftly and flashed like a torch with dazzling rays —Felix Salten
  65. The sunshine burned the pasture like fire —Rudyard Kipling
  66. The sunshine [of January day] cut like icicles —Edith Wharton
  67. The sunshine made spots before your eyes … as though a thousand weddings were to be held that day —Boris Pasternak
  68. Sunshine spread like butter over the fields —Lael Tucker Wertenbaker
  69. Sunshine that stretched like cloth of gold all up and down Fifth Avenue —Helen Hudson
  70. The sun shone as if there were no death —Saul Bellow
  71. The sun shone like a million dollars —Larry McMurtry
  72. The sun shone like Mr. Happy Face himself —Tom Robbins
  73. The sun shone with such violence that in an illumination like a long-prolonged glare of lightning the heavens looked black and white —Eudora Welty
  74. The sun shot upward and began to spin like a red cup on the point of a spear —Isaac Babel
  75. Sun sizzling like a skillet in the sky —Helen Hudson
  76. Sun slanting like a blade —Bin Ramke
  77. The sun’s rays like sheaves of wheat are gold and dry —Dame Edith Sitwell
  78. The sun stood still like a great shining altar —Hans Christian Andersen
  79. The sun swerves silently like a cyclist round the bend —Herbert Read
  80. The sun throbbed like a fever —William Plomer
  81. Sun … huge as a mountain of diamonds —Dame Edith Sitwell
  82. The sun up in the towering sky turns like a spinning ball —Edwin Muir
  83. The sun was high enough to sit on the roofs of buildings like a great open fire warming everything —Mark Helprin
  84. The sun was like a burning-glass —William Plomer

    This comparison from a poem entitled In the Snake Park refers to a lens used to focus the sun’s rays to start a fire.

  85. The sun was like a good cup of tea, strong and hot —Mike Fredman
  86. The sun was like a hot iron on their backs —Paul Horgan
  87. The sun was like a whip —T. Coraghessan Boyle
  88. The sun was pouring in like maple syrup into a green bowl —Carlos Baker
  89. The sun was shining like a congratulation —Margaret Millar
  90. The sun was streaking the sky with strips of red and white, like a slab of bacon —Jean Thompson
  91. [Sun] swung … like a faded shabby orange —Hugh Walpole
  92. (While they embraced,) the sun vanished as if it had been switched off —W. P. Kinsella
  93. The white sun twinking like the dawn under a speckled cloud —Percy Bysshe Shelley
  94. The yellow sun was ugly, like a raw egg on a plate —Elizabeth Bishop

sun


Past participle: sunned
Gerund: sunning
Imperative
sun
sun
Present
I sun
you sun
he/she/it suns
we sun
you sun
they sun
Preterite
I sunned
you sunned
he/she/it sunned
we sunned
you sunned
they sunned
Present Continuous
I am sunning
you are sunning
he/she/it is sunning
we are sunning
you are sunning
they are sunning
Present Perfect
I have sunned
you have sunned
he/she/it has sunned
we have sunned
you have sunned
they have sunned
Past Continuous
I was sunning
you were sunning
he/she/it was sunning
we were sunning
you were sunning
they were sunning
Past Perfect
I had sunned
you had sunned
he/she/it had sunned
we had sunned
you had sunned
they had sunned
Future
I will sun
you will sun
he/she/it will sun
we will sun
you will sun
they will sun
Future Perfect
I will have sunned
you will have sunned
he/she/it will have sunned
we will have sunned
you will have sunned
they will have sunned
Future Continuous
I will be sunning
you will be sunning
he/she/it will be sunning
we will be sunning
you will be sunning
they will be sunning
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been sunning
you have been sunning
he/she/it has been sunning
we have been sunning
you have been sunning
they have been sunning
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been sunning
you will have been sunning
he/she/it will have been sunning
we will have been sunning
you will have been sunning
they will have been sunning
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been sunning
you had been sunning
he/she/it had been sunning
we had been sunning
you had been sunning
they had been sunning
Conditional
I would sun
you would sun
he/she/it would sun
we would sun
you would sun
they would sun
Past Conditional
I would have sunned
you would have sunned
he/she/it would have sunned
we would have sunned
you would have sunned
they would have sunned
Thesaurus
Noun1.sun - the star that is the source of light and heat for the planets in the solar systemSun - the star that is the source of light and heat for the planets in the solar system; "the sun contains 99.85% of the mass in the solar system"; "the Earth revolves around the Sun"chromosphere - a gaseous layer of the sun's atmosphere (extending from the photosphere to the corona) that is visible during a total eclipse of the sunphotosphere - the intensely luminous surface of a star (especially the sun)solar system - the sun with the celestial bodies that revolve around it in its gravitational field
2.sun - the rays of the sunsun - the rays of the sun; "the shingles were weathered by the sun and wind"sunlight, sunshinelight, visible light, visible radiation - (physics) electromagnetic radiation that can produce a visual sensation; "the light was filtered through a soft glass window"sunburst - a sudden emergence of the sun from behind cloudssunbeam, sunray - a ray of sunlight
3.sun - a person considered as a source of warmth or energy or glory etcimportant person, influential person, personage - a person whose actions and opinions strongly influence the course of events
4.sun - any star around which a planetary system revolvesstar - (astronomy) a celestial body of hot gases that radiates energy derived from thermonuclear reactions in the interior
5.sun - first day of the weekSun - first day of the week; observed as a day of rest and worship by most ChristiansDominicus, Lord's Day, Sundayday of rest, rest day - a day set aside for restweekend - a time period usually extending from Friday night through Sunday; more loosely defined as any period of successive days including one and only one Sunday
Verb1.sun - expose one's body to the sunsunbathelie - be lying, be prostrate; be in a horizontal position; "The sick man lay in bed all day"; "the books are lying on the shelf"
2.sun - expose to the rays of the sun or affect by exposure to the sun; "insolated paper may turn yellow and crumble"; "These herbs suffer when sunned"insolate, solarise, solarizeexpose - expose or make accessible to some action or influence; "Expose your students to art"; "expose the blanket to sunshine"

sun

noun1. Sol, Helios (Greek myth), Phoebus (Greek myth), daystar (poetic), eye of heaven, Phoebus Apollo (Greek myth) The sun was now high in the southern sky.2. sunshine, sunlight, daylight, light, rays, warmth They were trying to soak up the sun.sun yourself sunbathe, tan, bask She was last seen sunning herself in a riverside park.Related words
adjective solar
like heliomania
Translations
太阳恒星日光晒太阳

sun

(san) noun1. the round body in the sky that gives light and heat to the earth. The Sun is nearly 150 million kilometres away from the Earth. 太陽 太阳2. any of the fixed stars. Do other suns have planets revolving round them? 恆星 恒星3. light and heat from the sun; sunshine. We sat in the sun; In Britain they don't get enough sun; The sun has faded the curtains. 日光 日光 verbpast tense, past participle sunned to expose (oneself) to the sun's rays. He's sunning himself in the garden. 曬太陽 晒太阳ˈsunless adjective without sun, or lacking sunlight. a sunless room. 無日光的 无日光的ˈsunny adjective1. filled with sunshine. sunny weather. 和煦的 和煦的2. cheerful and happy. The child has a sunny nature. 快樂的 快乐的ˈsunniness noun 歡樂,和煦 欢乐,和煦 ˈsunbathe verb to lie or sit in the sun, especially wearing few clothes, in order to get a suntan. 日光浴 日光浴ˈsunbeam noun a ray of the sun. 一道陽光 一道阳光ˈsunburn noun the brown or red colour of the skin caused by exposure to the sun's rays. 曬傷 晒伤ˈsunburned, ˈsunburnt adjectivesunburnt faces. 曬傷的 晒伤的ˈsundial noun a device, usually in a garden, for telling time from the shadow of a rod or plate on its surface cast by the sun. 日昝 日昝ˈsundown noun (especially American) sunset. 日落 日落ˈsunflower noun a type of large yellow flower with petals like rays of the sun, from whose seeds we get oil. 向日葵 向日葵ˈsunglasses noun plural glasses of dark-coloured glass or plastic to protect the eyes in bright sunlight. 太陽眼鏡 太阳眼镜ˈsunlight noun the light of the sun. The cat was sitting in a patch of sunlight. 陽光 阳光ˈsunlit adjective lighted up by the sun. a sunlit room. 陽光照射的 阳光照射的ˈsunrise noun the rising of the sun in the morning, or the time of this. 日出 日出ˈsunset noun the setting of the sun, or the time of this. the red glow of the sunset. 日落 日落ˈsunshade noun a type of umbrella for sheltering a person from the sun; a parasol. 遮陽傘 遮阳伞ˈsunshine noun1. the light of the sun. The children were playing in the sunshine. 陽光 阳光2. cheerfulness or happiness. 快樂 快乐ˈsunstroke noun a serious illness caused by being in very hot sunshine for too long. 日射病,中暑 日射病,中暑 ˈsuntan noun a brown colour of the skin caused by exposure to the sun. I'm trying to get a suntan. 曬黑 晒黑catch the sun to become sunburnt. 曬黑的 晒黑的under the sun in the whole world. I'm sure that he must have visited every country under the sun. 世界上 在世界上,天下

sun

太阳zhCN
  • Where can I rent a sun lounger? (US)
    Where can I hire a sun lounger? (UK) → 哪儿能租到沙滩椅
  • Where can I rent a sun umbrella? (US)
    Where can I hire a sunshade? (UK) → 哪儿能租到阳伞

sun


See:
  • (one's) moment in the sun
  • (one's) sun has set
  • (one's) tongue is hanging out
  • a place in the sun
  • a touch of the sun
  • a/(one's) place in the sun
  • as if the sun shines out (someone's) backside
  • catch the sun
  • everything but the kitchen sink
  • everything under the sun
  • go to bed with the sun
  • Happy is the bride that the sun shines on
  • have the sun in (one's) eyes
  • head for
  • head for the setting sun
  • in the sun
  • Make hay while the sun shines
  • never let the sun go down on your anger
  • nothing new under the sun
  • place in the sun
  • rise with the sun
  • soak up
  • someone's sun is set
  • sun belt
  • sun is over the yardarm, when the
  • sun worshipper
  • the sun belt
  • the sun is over the yardarm
  • There is nothing new under the sun
  • there's nothing new under the sun
  • think the sun rises and sets on
  • think the sun shines out (someone's) backside
  • under the sun
  • where the sun don’t shine
  • where the sun don't shine

Sun


Sun,

river, c.130 mi (210 km) long, rising in the Rocky Mts., NW Mont., and flowing generally E to the Missouri River at Great Falls. The Sun River project of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation utilizes the Sun and its tributaries to irrigate c.92,000 acres (37,230 hectares) of land. Of the system of dams and reservoirs, Gibson Dam is one of the project's largest.

sun,

intensely hot, self-luminous body of gases at the center of the solar systemsolar system,
the sun and the surrounding planets, natural satellites, dwarf planets, asteroids, meteoroids, and comets that are bound by its gravity. The sun is by far the most massive part of the solar system, containing almost 99.9% of the system's total mass.
..... Click the link for more information.
. Its gravitational attraction maintains the planets, comets, and other bodies of the solar system in their orbits.

General Characteristics of the Sun

The sun is a starstar,
hot incandescent sphere of gas, held together by its own gravitation, and emitting light and other forms of electromagnetic radiation whose ultimate source is nuclear energy.
..... Click the link for more information.
 of about medium size; it appears so much larger and brighter than the other stars because of its relative nearness to the earth. The earth's distance from the sun varies from 91,377,000 mi (147,053,000 km) at perihelion to 94,537,000 mi (152,138,000 km) at aphelion (see apsisapsis
(pl. apsides), point in the orbit of a body where the body is neither approaching nor receding from another body about which it revolves. Any elliptical orbit has two apsides.
..... Click the link for more information.
). The mean distance is c.92,960,000 mi (149,591,000 km); this is taken as the astronomical unitastronomical unit
(AU), mean distance between the earth and sun; one AU is c.92,960,000 mi (149,604,970 km). The astronomical unit is the principal unit of measurement within the solar system, e.g., Mercury is just over 1-3 AU and Pluto is about 39 AU from the sun.
..... Click the link for more information.
 (AU) of distance used for measuring distances within the solar system. The sun is approximately 865,400 mi (1,392,000 km) in diameter, and its volume is about 1,300,000 times that of the earth. Its mass is almost 700 times the total mass of all the bodies in the solar system and 332,000 times that of the earth. The sun's surface gravity is almost 28 times that of the earth; i.e., a body on the surface of the sun would weigh about 28 times its weight on earth. The density of the material composing the sun is about one fourth that of the earth; compared with water, the sun's average density is 1.41. At its center, the sun has a density of over 100 times that of water, a temperature of 10 to 20 million degrees Celsius, and a pressure of over 1 billion atmospheres.

Observations of sunspots and studies of the solar spectrum indicate that the sun rotates on its axis from east to west; because of its gaseous nature its rate of rotation varies somewhat with latitude, the speed being greatest (a period of almost 25 days) in the equatorial region and least at the poles (a period of about 35 days). The axis of the sun is inclined at an angle of about 7° to the plane of the eclipticecliptic
, the great circle on the celestial sphere that lies in the plane of the earth's orbit (called the plane of the ecliptic). Because of the earth's yearly revolution around the sun, the sun appears to move in an annual journey through the heavens with the ecliptic as its
..... Click the link for more information.
.

The bright surface of the sun is called the photospherephotosphere,
luminous, apparently opaque layer of gases that forms the visible surface of the sun or any other star. The photosphere lies between the dense interior gases and the more attenuated gases of the chromosphere.
..... Click the link for more information.
. Its temperature is about 6,000&degC;. The photosphere appears darker near the edge (limb) of the sun's disk because of greater absorption of light by the sun's atmosphere in this area; this phenomenon is called limb darkening. During an eclipse of the sun the chromospherechromosphere
[Gr.,=color sphere], layer of rarefied, transparent gases in the solar atmosphere; it measures 6,000 mi (9,700 km) in thickness and lies between the photosphere (the sun's visible surface) and the corona (its outer atmosphere).
..... Click the link for more information.
 and the coronacorona,
luminous envelope surrounding the sun, outside the chromosphere. Its density is less than one billionth that of the earth's atmosphere. The corona is visible only at the time of totality during a total eclipse of the sun.
..... Click the link for more information.
 (the outer layers of the sun's atmosphere) are observed. Also of interest is the high-speed, tenuous extension of the corona known as the solar windsolar wind,
stream of ionized hydrogen—protons and electrons—with an 8% component of helium ions and trace amounts of heavier ions that radiates outward from the sun at high speeds.
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Production of Solar Energy

The vast and continual production of solar energy cannot be attributed merely to combustion, to the gradual cooling of a hot body, to the fall of meteorites into the sun, or to gradual shrinkage with transformation of potential energy into heat (a theory proposed by Helmholtz). The theory of relativity with its implication of the equivalence of mass and energy led to the assumption that energy stored in the atoms constituting the sun's gases is constantly being released by conversion of some of the masses of the atom's nuclei during nuclear transmutations (see nuclear energynuclear energy,
the energy stored in the nucleus of an atom and released through fission, fusion, or radioactivity. In these processes a small amount of mass is converted to energy according to the relationship E = mc2, where E is energy, m
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). H. A. Bethe proposed a cycle of nuclear reactions known as the carbon cycle, or CNO bi-cycle, to account for the nuclear changes. In this cycle carbon acts much as a catalyst, while hydrogen is transformed by a series of reactions into helium and large amounts of high-energy gamma radiation are released. It is now thought that the so-called proton-proton process is a more important energy source; this process begins with the collision of two protons and ends with the production of helium, while gamma radiation is released throughout.

See nucleosynthesisnucleosynthesis
or nucleogenesis,
in astronomy, production of all the chemical elements from the simplest element, hydrogen, by thermonuclear reactions within stars, supernovas, and in the big bang at the beginning of the universe (see nucleus; nuclear energy).
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; stellar evolutionstellar evolution,
life history of a star, beginning with its condensation out of the interstellar gas (see interstellar matter) and ending, sometimes catastrophically, when the star has exhausted its nuclear fuel or can no longer adjust itself to a stable configuration.
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.

The Study of the Sun

By means of the spectroscopespectroscope,
optical instrument for producing spectral lines and measuring their wavelengths and intensities, used in spectral analysis (see spectrum). When a material is heated to incandescence it emits light that is characteristic of the atomic makeup of the material.
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 much has been learned about the composition of the sun. There are numerous dark lines of varying widths in the solar spectrumspectrum,
arrangement or display of light or other form of radiation separated according to wavelength, frequency, energy, or some other property. Beams of charged particles can be separated into a spectrum according to mass in a mass spectrometer (see mass spectrograph).
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. These were first intensively studied by Joseph Fraunhofer and are commonly known by his name. From a study of the lines the chemical composition of the sun is determined on the basis of the discovery by Kirchhoff that the dark lines correspond in position to the bright lines characteristic of the spectra produced by elements in the laboratory. The darkness of the lines in the sun's spectrum is attributed to the presence of a slightly cooler layer of gases above the photosphere, known as the reversing layer, which absorbs selectively the light of the photosphere and thus causes dark lines instead of bright ones to be observed through the spectroscope. By comparison of the sun's spectrum with laboratory spectra of incandescent elements, most of the elements known on earth have been identified in the sun's atmosphere.

Beyond the red portion of the visible solar spectrum is the infrared spectrum; for the study of these heat rays S. P. Langley invented the bolometer, a highly sensitive electrical device for measuring temperature. Solar heat and energy are measured by an instrument called the pyrheliometer. Other instruments devised especially for the study of the sun are the coronagraphcoronagraph
, device invented by the French astronomer B. Lyot (1931) for the purpose of observing the corona of the sun and solar prominences occurring in the chromosphere.
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 and the spectroheliographspectroheliograph,
device for photographing the surface of the sun in a single wavelength of light, usually one corresponding to a chief element contained in the sun, e.g., hydrogen or calcium; the resulting photograph is called a spectroheliogram.
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. These instruments and others have revealed a number of interesting phenomena occurring during the periods of solar activity associated with sunspotssunspots,
dark, usually irregularly shaped spots on the sun's surface that are actually solar magnetic storms. The spots are darker because the temperature of the spots is lower than that of the surrounding photosphere (the visible surface of the sun).
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, e.g., faculae, plages (flocculi), prominences, flares, and coronal mass ejections (eruptions of charged particles into space).

Importance to Terrestrial Life

Without the heat and light of the sun, life as we know it could not exist on the earth. Since solar energy is used by green plants in the process of photosynthesis, the sun is the ultimate source of the energy stored both in food and fossil fuels. Solar heating sets up convection currents, and thus is the source of the energy of moving air. Falling rain also owes its energy to the sun because of the relation of solar radiation to the water cycle.

Bibliography

See K. Hufbauer, Exploring the Sun: Solar Science since Galileo (1993); R. Krippenhahn, Discovering the Secrets of the Sun (1994); K. J. H. Phillips, Guide to the Sun (1995); P. O. Taylor, Beginners Guide to the Sun (1996); S. T. Suess and B. T. Tsurutani, ed., From the Sun: Auroras, Magnetic Storms, Solar Flares, Cosmic Rays (1998).

Sun

The central body of the Solar System and nearest star to Earth, situated at an average distance of 149 600 000 km. A main-sequence star of spectral type G2 V, mass 1.9891 × 1030 kg, diameter 1 392 000 km, luminosity 3.83 × 1026 watts, and absolute visual magnitude +4.8, the Sun is a representative yellow dwarf. It is the only star whose surface and outer layers can be examined in detail.

The Sun is composed predominantly of hydrogen and helium (about 70% by mass hydrogen, 28% by mass helium), with about 2% of heavy elements. It generates its energy by nuclear fusion processes, the most important of which is the proton-proton chain reaction, and is losing mass as a result, at a rate of about 4 000 000 tonnes per second. The generation of energy takes place in a central core, which has a temperature of around 15 000 000 K, is about 400 000 km in diameter and contains about 60% of the Sun's mass (in barely 2% of its volume). Outside the core is the radiative zone, an envelope of unevolved material through which energy from the core is transported by successive absorption and emission of radiation in collisions between the atomic particles (see energy transport). The individual particles proceed outward in a ‘random walk’, in which their direction of travel and energy change with each collision. It has been estimated that it may take as long as 20 million years for the energy generated in the core to reach the surface. The radiative zone extends to within about 200 000 km of the surface, where, the temperature having fallen to around 1 000 000 K, convection becomes the more important mode of energy transport (see convective zone).

The surface of the Sun, or photosphere, represents the boundary between the opaque convective zone and the transparent solar atmosphere. It is a stratum several hundred kilometers thick, from which almost all the energy emitted by the Sun is radiated into space. A permanent feature of the photosphere is the granulation, which gives it a mottled appearance. More striking are the sunspots and their associated faculae, the numbers of which fluctuate over an average period of approximately 11 years – the so-called sunspot cycle.

Observation of the transit of sunspots across the Sun's disk discloses a differential rotation, the synodic period of which increases with heliographic latitude from 26.87 days at the equator to 29.65 days at ±40° (beyond which sunspots are seldom seen). The mean synodic period is taken to be 27.2753 days, which is equivalent to a sidereal period of approximately 25.38 days (and corresponds to the actual period at around ±15° latitude). Spectroscopic measurements show that the rotation period continues to increase right up to the polar regions and that at any given latitude it decreases with height above the photosphere, except at the equator where the periods are approximately equal. The reason for this differential rotation is unknown, although it has been suggested that it may be caused by rapid rotation of the Sun's core. From the base to the top of the photosphere the temperature falls from about 6000 K to about 4000 K.

Immediately above the photosphere is the chromosphere, a stratum a few thousand kilometers thick, in which the temperature rises from about 4000 K to around 50 000 K as the density decreases exponentially with height. Between this and the exceedingly rarified corona is the transition region, a stratum several hundred kilometers thick, in which the temperature rises further to around 500 000 K. The corona itself attains a temperature of around 2 000 000 K at a height of about 75 000 km. It extends for many million kilometers into the interplanetary medium, where the solar wind carries a stream of atomic particles to the depths of the Solar System.

The Sun is thought to possess a weak general magnetic field, although this has yet to be distinguished from the transient polar fields resulting from the dispersal of the intense localized fields of sunspots (see sunspot cycle).

The age of the Sun is at least 4.6 billion (109) years and it may be regarded as a middle-aged star. After a similar period it is expected to expand to a red giant and then to collapse to a white dwarf (see stellar evolution).

See also active Sun; neutrino astronomy; quiet Sun; solar activity.

A seventeenth-century engraving of the Sun. Reproduced by permission of Fortean Picture Library.

Sun

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

The Sun is the star around which Earth and the rest of the planets in the solar system orbit. The earth orbits the sun at an average distance of 93 million miles and takes 365.26 days to complete a revolution—known as a sidereal year. The plane upon which the Earth travels around the Sun is called the ecliptic. From the perspective of the Earth, it appears as if the Sun is revolving around the Earth against a particular band of background stars. This band of 12 constellations is known as the Zodiac. The moon and all the planets orbit within the confines of this 18-degree-wide band, with the Sun apparently traveling on the ecliptic, its center. Therefore the latitude of the Sun is always zero. Although the Sun never appears to retrograde in the sky as the other planets do, it does appear to slow down in speed as the Earth distances itself from it in its annual orbit. This occurs during the northern hemisphere’s summer months when the Sun’s apparent speed falls under its mean 59 minutes and 8 seconds per day. Astrologically, it rules the sign of Leo where it is most comfortable and is exalted in the sign of Aries where the Babylonians considered it to be held in special esteem.

The Mesopotamian civilizations were some of the earliest to systematically observe the movements of the Sun and planets in the sky. Because of the difficulty in locating the sun against the map of the stars during the day, the Babylonians had two methods by which they inferred its position in the zodiac. In the first method they noted the phase of the Moon and its zodiacal position and from that inferred where the Sun was located in the sky. Therefore, if the Moon were in its waxing quarter phase and located in the sign of Virgo, one could deduce that the Sun was somewhere in the sign of Gemini. In the other method, the Babylonians located the Sun by observing the constellations rising and setting just before and after the Sun, when its light was dim enough to be able to observe the star map. This second method was also popular amongst the Egyptians who used a solar calendar and had mapped the sky into constellations. In contrast, the lunar Babylonian calendar allowed them to discover that 19 solar years were roughly equal in length to 235 lunar months. This is known as the Metonic cycle, whose 19-year solar period is important in the timing of events in Hellenistic astrology.

In Sumerian the Sun was known as Utu and in Akkadian as Shamash, the names of the two solar deities of Mesopotamia. However, according to Nick Campion, the two words could mean either the visible planet or the hidden power within it, i.e. the god. Campion argues that the Sumerians considered the planets and stars to be under the power or authority of specific deities, but that they were not understood as the planet itself. This is one of the reasons why the sun-god is not the most central figure in the Mesopotamian mythologies nor of that of the Greeks who mapped much of their Pantheon onto the sky religion of the Babylonians. Another related explanation, as Robert Powell points out, is that the Babylonians noted that none of the planets were always visible in the sky, therefore no single deity could have supreme authority. Instead they governed through a council made up of all seven gods. During the Babylonian history, Marduk (the deity associated with the planet Jupiter) established himself as the president of the Council, but the Moon god, Sin, had also been known as “lord of the gods” in a time before the rulership of Marduk. Similarly during the Old Babylonian period of the Amorite king Hammurabi (1792–1750 b.c.e.), the sun god Shamash was considered the “king of the gods.” In fact “Hammu” was the old Semitic name for the sun-god and thus, according to Powell, points to the worship of the solar deity.

Shamash was the son of Sin (a male lunar deity) and brother of Ishtar (associated with the planet Venus). He was the great benefactor to humanity because he ignited and supported the growth of life through his light and warmth. However, the early civilizations of the arid Mediterranean and Middle East, were all too aware of the Sun’s scorching rays and his ability to burn up crops and dry up rivers and lakes. In Hellenistic and Hindu astrology this translated into a negative influence of the Sun when it was positioned too close to one of the other planets. The planet was designated as “combust” (within 8° from the Sun) or “under the Sun’s beams” (within 17°) and was either interpreted as being hidden or operating in secrecy (out of sight), according to Hellenistic astrology, or as weak and ineffective in the Jyotish tradition. This concept of light translating into a higher degree of “sight” finds an echo in the Greek sun-god Helios who was also the god of seeing and often invoked to heal blindness. Medieval astrology, which was largely an Arabic evolution of the Hellenistic tradition, regarded combustion as especially detrimental. Guido Bonatti (thirteenth century) says: “A corporal conjunction with the Sun is the greatest misfortune that can befall a planet.” To William Lilly, the Sun is associated with eyesight, cataracts, eye diseases and the brain—and an echo of this can be found in Vedic astrology.

One of the more notable characteristics of the Babylonian sun-god was that he was the arbiter of justice, a role associated with Jupiter in modern astrology. Powell explains this perspective in terms of the interpretation of the Sun’s regularity as “infallibility,” a desirable trait in the arbitration of justice. In Jacobsen, it is Utu’s ability to “enlighten” or to have “clarity of vision” which is considered when he says Utu is the “power in light, the foe of darkness. On the social place he therefore becomes a power for justice and equality …. He is therefore the judge of god and men, presiding in the morning in courts such as the one we know from the Bathhouse Ritual, where demons and other evil doers are sued by their human victims. At night he judges disputes among the dead of the netherworld. He is the last appeal of the wronged who can obtain no justice from their fellow men, and their cry of despair to him, ‘i-Utu!’ was feared as possessing supernatural power” (as noted in Nick Campion’s Cosmos: A Cultural History of Astrology.

Conversely, Hellenistic astrologers also noticed that the Sun’s close rays could hide other planets and keep them from exerting their powers in an obvious way. This dual nature of the Sun is described in Ariel Guttman and Kenneth Johnson’s Mythic Astrology in terms of the Greek myth involving the other solar deity, Apollo. While Helios personified the physical Sun, driving his chariot across the sky and ordering the days and the seasons, Apollo represented the Soul of the Sun. After Apollo was born of Leto and Zeus on Delos, he searched for a place where he could build his shrine. He came across a site that was guarded by a giant python, on what became known as Delphi. Apollo slew the serpent and set up his shrine, which became the oracle of Delphi where messages received by a prophetess known as the Pythoness were thought to be direct messages from the sun-god himself. Two admonitions written on the temple gates read: “Know thyself’ and “Nothing in excess.” According to Guttman and Johnson, the myth and the messages depict Apollo and the Sun as the “reconciler of opposites,” the power of the masculine directive principle to unite with the more mystical feminine principle lying beneath directed consciousness. These two polarities are born out in the activities governed by Apollo requiring focused consciousness: mathematics, science, archery; and those requiring a deeper mystical consciousness—prophecy, dreams, oracles. As god of music and healing, Apollo depicts this ability to create order out of the numinous. Similarly, Shamash is often depicted as rising between two mountains, which to Guttman and Johnson represent the boundaries of the world—the polarities of human consciousness.

In Robert Schmidt’s reconstruction of Hellenistic astrology, he distills the basic nature of the Sun as one involving the principles of selection and preference. In concrete terms these can be translated into significations of kings, leaders, the father, the head, the heart, friendship, honors, important people, gold, statues, judgment, reputation, rank, etc. Modern psychological astrology interprets the position of the Sun in the natal chart as indicative of one’s ego, self-confidence, will, and intention. An exaggeration of these functions can lead to exaggerated pride, conceit, arrogance, and egocentrism. In both conceptualizations, the idea of choice and the elevation of a particular thing over another is fundamental. Glenn Perry describes the role of the Sun as the “decider subsystem” of the psyche. “The Sun is responsible for expressing or suppressing the various functions that the planets symbolize …. The Sun has to regulate the expression of every planet.” Thus, as in the Apollo myth, the Sun is responsible for reconciling the extreme expressions of the human psyche, much in the same way that its central astronomical position regulates and balances the planets within its gravitational sphere. In a more ancient vernacular, Vettius Valens similarly says: “The all-seeing Sun, existent in a fire-like manner and as the light of the mind, the organ of perception of the soul.”

While one may see in Vettius Valen’s allusions to the Sun as soul, modern concepts inherent in transpersonal psychology, Schmidt states that this particular text “seems to imply that the Sun has this role in the cosmos as a whole, not in the native.” The Hellenistic form of astrology which Valens practiced was rooted in a Neoplatonic conceptualization of the universe as a cosmic animal with intelligence and language. In Plato’s Republic, the highest God was called “the Good” and the Sun was envisioned as its archetype or “the son of the Good.” Therefore the Good was considered a “transmundane sun” who created the world and everything in it through the power of its reason or Logos. In the Gospel of St. John (1:1–2), the Logos is referred to as the divine word: “In the beginning was the Word (Logos) and the Word was with God. According to St. John, the Logos incarnated as Christ who was therefore identified with the spirit of the Sun. It is against this background that early Christians placed the birth of Christ on December 25, which was the date of the pagan festival of Sol Invictus (Invincible Sun) and the date on which the winter solstice was celebrated (when Helios was thought to be reborn as his light increased until the summer solstice).

A case for the physical, as well as the symbolic influence of the Sun on the affairs of human beings has been made by natural astrologers such as Percy Seymour. It is well known by scientists that the Earth’s magnetic field is affected by the Sun’s magnetic activity (sunspots and solar flares) which rises and falls in 22-year cycles. Seymour argues that not only does the Sun’s magnetic field affect events on Earth, as is evidenced from marks in tree rings every 22 years, but the other planets in the solar system also affect the magnetic activity occurring on the Sun. Specifically, “Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune cause the little eddy currents that cause the sun’s magnetic field to reverse or flip over.” Michel Gauquelin’s lesser known studies involving planetary heredity have shown evidence that children born on days when solar activity is more disturbed, are more likely to have the same planets as their parents in certain parts of the birth chart. “The number of hereditary similarities between the child and the parent is two and a half times greater if the child has entered the world on a magnetically disturbed day than if the child is born on a calm day.”

Sources:

Aveni, Anthony. Stairways to the Stars. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1997.Campion, Nick. Cosmos: A Cultural History of Astrology. London: London Books, 2001.DeFouw, Hart, and Robert Svoboda. Light on Life. New York: Arkana Penguin Books, 1996.Gauquelin, Michel. Cosmic Influences on Human Behavior. Santa Fe, NM: Aurora Press, 1994.Guttman, Ariel, and Kenneth Johnson. Mythic Astrology. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications, 1998.Holden, James Herschel. A History of Horoscopic Astrology. Tempe, AZ: American Federation of Astrologers, 1996.Lehman, J. Lee. Classical Astrology for Modern Living. Atglen, PA: Whitford Press, 1996.Louis, Anthony. Horary Astrology Plain and Simple. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications, 1998.Perry, Glenn. Mapping the Landscape of the Soul. San Rafael, CA: Association of Astrological Psychology, 2001.Powell, Robert. History of the Planets. San Diego: ACS Publications, 1985.Schmidt, Robert. Original Source Texts and Auxiliary Materials for the Study of Hellenistic Astrology. Cumberland, MD: Phaser Foundation, 2002.Seymour, Percy. Interview in Mountain Astrologer. August/September 1998.Wilson, James. A Complete Dictionary of Astrology. London: W. Hughes, 1819.

—Maria J. Mateus

Sun

 

a hot plasma sphere that is the central body of the solar system. The sun is the closest star to the earth.

The mass of the sun is 1.990 × 1030 kg, which is 332,958 times greater than the mass of the earth. The sun contains 99.866 percent of the mass of the solar system. The solar parallax—that is, the angle subtended at the sun’s center by the earth’s equatorial radius when the earth is at its mean distance from the sun—is equal to 8.794“, or 4.263 × 10–5 radian (rad). The distance of the earth from the sun varies from 1.4710 × 1011 m in January to 1.5210 × 1011 m in July; the mean distance, which is known as the astronomical unit, is 1.4960 × 1011 m. The mean angular diameter of the sun is 1,919.26”, or 9.305 × 10–3 rad. The diameter of the sun is 1.392 × 109 m and is thus 109 times greater than the equatorial diameter of the earth. The mean density of the sun is 1.41 × 103 kg/m3. The gravitational acceleration at the sun’s surface is 273.98 m/sec2, and the escape velocity 6.18 × 105 m/sec. The effective surface temperature of the sun, as calculated in accordance with the Stefan-Boltzmann law from the total energy radiated by the sun, is 5770°K (see).

History of telescopic observation. The first telescopic observations of the sun were made by Galileo in 1611. He discovered sunspots and showed that the sun rotates about its axis. In 1843 the German astronomer H. Schwabe discovered the cyclicity of solar activity. The development of methods of spectrum analysis permitted study of the physical conditions on the sun. J. von Fraunhofer’s discovery of dark absorption lines in the solar spectrum in 1814 laid the foundation for study of the chemical composition of the sun. Observations of solar eclipses have been conducted regularly since 1836; results of these observations include the discovery of the solar corona, the solar chromosphere, and solar prominences. In 1913 the American astronomer G. Hale detected the Zeeman splitting of some Fraunhofer lines in sun-spot spectra and thereby demonstrated the existence of magnetic fields on the sun. By 1942, the Swedish astronomer B. Edlén and others had identified several lines of the coronal spectrum as lines of highly ionized elements; evidence was thus provided for a high temperature in the corona. In 1931, B. Lyot invented the corona-graph, which made possible observation of the corona and chromosphere at times other than during solar eclipses. The radio emission of the sun was discovered in the early 1940’s.

The development of magnetohydrodynamics and plasma physics in the second half of the 20th century gave a substantial impetus to the development of solar physics. The onset of the space age brought the application of the methods of space astronomy, or extraterrestrial astronomy, to the study of solar radiation in the ultraviolet and X-ray regions of the spectrum. These methods involve the use of rockets, automatic orbiting observatories on artificial earth satellites, and manned space laboratories.

In the USSR, solar research is carried on at the Crimean and Pulkovo observatories and at astronomical institutions in Moscow, Kiev, Tashkent, Alma-Ata, Abastumani, and Irkutsk. Most astrophysical observatories outside the USSR engage in solar research (seeASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORIES AND INSTITUTES).

Rotation. The sun rotates about its axis in the same direction as the earth. The solar equator is inclined at 7°15’ to the plane of the ecliptic, that is, the plane of the earth’s orbit. The rotational speed can be determined from the apparent motion of various features of the solar atmosphere and from the shift of the lines of the spectrum of the limb, or edge, of the solar disk owing to the Doppler effect. Through these methods, the sun’s period of rotation was found to be different at different latitudes.

The positions of features on the solar surface are determined in terms of heliographic coordinates. The heliographic latitude is measured from the solar equator. The heliographic longitude is measured from the central meridian of the visible solar disk or from some other meridian selected as the prime meridian. It is assumed here that the sun rotates as a solid body. Astronomical yearbooks give the position of the prime meridian for each day. The yearbooks also give the position of the solar axis on the celestial sphere.

A point whose heliographic latitude is 17° completes a single rotation, relative to the earth, in 27.275 days; the period of rotation measured in this way is known as the synodic period. The sidereal period of rotation, that is, the period relative to the stars, at the same latitude is 25.38 days. The sidereal angular speed of rotation ω varies with the latitude φ in accordance with the equation (ω = 14.44° – 3°(sin2 φ) per day. The linear speed of rotation at the solar equator is approximately 2,000 m/sec.

The sun as a star. The sun is a typical yellow dwarf and lies near the middle of the main sequence of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. The apparent photovisual magnitude of the sun is –26.74, and the absolute visual magnitude Mv is +4.83. The color index of the sun for the blue (B) and visual (V) spectral regions is MB – Mv = 0.65. The sun’s spectral type is G2V. The speed of the sun in space relative to the nearest stars is 19.7 × 103 m/sec. The sun is located within one of the spiral arms of the Milky Way Galaxy at a distance of approximately 10 kiloparsecs from the Galaxy’s center. The sun’s period of revolution about the center of the Galaxy is approximately 200 million years. The age of the sun is approximately 5 × 109 years.

Internal structure. The internal structure of the sun is determined on the assumption that the sun is a spherically symmetric body and is in equilibrium. A model of the sun’s internal structure can be constructed on the basis of the following: the energy transport equation; the law of conservation of energy; the equation of state of an ideal gas; the Stefan-Boltzmann law; the conditions for hydrostatic, radiative, and convective equilibrium; ob-servationally determined values for the total radiation, total mass, and radius of the sun; and data on the sun’s chemical composition. Hydrogen is presumed to make up about 70 percent of the sun’s mass, and helium about 27 percent; the content of all other elements is presumed to be about 2.5 percent. On the basis of these assumptions, it has been calculated that the temperature at the sun’s center is (10–15) × 106°K, the density is about 1.5 × 105 kg/m3, and the pressure is 3.4 × 1016 newtons per m2(N/m2), or about 3 × 1016 atmospheres.

Nuclear reactions in the sun’s interior are presumed to be the energy source that replenishes the energy lost to radiation and maintains the high temperature of the sun. The mean quantity of energy generated within the sun is 1.92 ergs/g/sec. The release of energy is due to nuclear reactions in which hydrogen is converted into helium. Two series of such thermonuclear reactions are possible in the sun: the proton-proton chain, or hydrogen cycle, and the carbon cycle. It is most likely that the proton-proton chain predominates in the sun. This cycle consists of three reactions: (1) nuclei of deuterium, which is a heavy isotope of hydrogen of mass number 2, form from hydrogen nuclei; (2) nuclei of the helium isotope of mass number 3 form from the deuterium nuclei; and (3) nuclei of the stable isotope of helium of mass number 4 form from the light helium nuclei.

Energy transport. Energy is transported outward from the inner layers of the sun mainly through the absorption of electromagnetic radiation from lower layers and the subsequent reemission of the radiation. Since the temperature decreases with increasing distance from the center of the sun, the wavelength of the radiation transporting the greater part of the energy to the upper layers gradually increases (seeWIEN’S LAW OF RADIATION).

Convective transport of energy—that is, transport through the motion of hot material upward from inner layers and the motion of cooler material toward the center—plays an important role in the relatively high layers forming the convective zone of the sun. This zone begins at a depth of the order of 0.2 solar radius and is about 108 m thick. The speed of the convective motions increases with increasing distance from the center of the sun and in the outer portion of the convective zone reaches 2,000–2,500 m/sec.

In even higher layers—that is, in the solar atmosphere—energy is again transported through radiation. Some energy is carried to the upper layers of the solar atmosphere (the chromosphere and corona) by mechanical and magnetohydrodynamic waves that are generated in the convective zone but are absorbed only in these layers. The density of the upper atmosphere is very low, and the required removal of energy by radiation and thermal conduction is possible only if the kinetic temperature of these layers is sufficiently high. Finally, in the upper portion of the corona, most of the energy is carried away by the solar wind, which is an outflow of matter from the sun.

The temperature in each layer is at such a level that an energy balance is automatically maintained: the amount of energy acquired owing to absorption of radiation, to thermal conduction, or to convection is equal to the sum of the energy losses of the layer.

Total radiation. The total solar radiation can be determined from the irradiance from the sun at the earth’s surface. The average illuminance at the earth’s surface is about 100,000 lux when the sun is at the zenith. Outside the atmosphere, at the earth’s mean distance from the sun, the illuminance is 127,000 lux. The luminous intensity of the sun is 2.84 × 1027 international candles. The important quantity known as the solar constant is the total radiation energy received from the sun per min per cm2 on a surface that is outside the atmosphere at the earth’s mean distance from the sun and is perpendicular to the sun’s rays. The total energy output of the sun is 3.83 × 1026 watts (W), of which about 2 × 1017 W reach the earth. The mean luminance of the solar surface when observed outside the earth’s atmosphere is 1.98 × 109nits (nt), and the luminance of the center of the solar disk is 2.48 × 109 nt. The luminance of the solar disk decreases from the center of the disk to the limb. This decrease depends on the wavelength—for example, the luminance at the limb is about 0.2 of that of the center for light of wavelength 3,600 angstroms (Å) and is about 0.3 of the luminance of the center for light of wavelength 5,000 A. At the very edge of the solar disk, the luminance decreases by a factor of 100 over less than 1 second of arc. For this reason, the boundary of the solar disk appears very sharp.

Spectral composition of emitted light. The spectral composition of the light emitted by the sun—that is, the spectral energy distribution—roughly corresponds to the energy distribution in the radiation of a blackbody at a temperature of about 6000°K (after allowance is made for absorption in the earth’s atmosphere and for the Fraunhofer lines). Marked deviations, however, are observed in some parts of the spectrum. The energy maximum in the solar spectrum corresponds to the wavelength 4,600 Å.

The solar spectrum is a continuum on which more than 20,000 absorption lines (Fraunhofer lines) are superposed. More than 60 percent of the Fraunhofer lines have been identified as the spectral lines of known chemical elements by comparison of the wavelengths and relative intensities of the Fraunhofer lines with laboratory spectra. Study of the Fraunhofer lines gives information not only on the chemical composition of the solar atmosphere but also on the physical conditions in the layers in which particular lines arise.

The predominant element in the sun is hydrogen. The number of hydrogen atoms is four or five times greater than the number of helium atoms and is at least 1,000 times greater than the number of atoms of all the other elements combined. Among these other elements, the most abundant include oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, magnesium, silicon, sulfur, and iron. Lines belonging to some molecules and free radicals, such as OH, NH, CH, and CO, can also be identified in the solar spectrum.

Magnetic fields. Magnetic fields on the sun are measured primarily on the basis of the Zeeman splitting of the absorption lines in the solar spectrum (seeZEEMAN EFFECT). Several types of magnetic fields can be distinguished (see). The sun’s general magnetic field is weak; it reaches a strength of 1 oersted for a given polarity and varies with time. This field is closely connected with the interplanetary magnetic field and the interplanetary field’s sectorial structure. The magnetic fields associated with solar activity can reach strengths of several thousand oersteds in sunspots. The structure of the magnetic fields in active regions is very complicated and magnetic poles of opposite polarity alternate. Localized magnetic fields of hundreds of oersteds are also found outside the sunspots. Magnetic fields penetrate into the chromosphere and into the solar corona.

Magnetohydrodynamic and plasma processes play an important role on the sun. At temperatures of 5000°-10,000°K, the gas is sufficiently ionized and has a high conductivity; because of the vast scale of solar phenomena, the magnitudes of the electromechanical and magnetomechanical interactions are very large (seeCOSMIC MAGNETOHYDRODYNAMICS).

Photosphere. The solar atmosphere consists of the outer, observable layers of the sun. Almost all solar radiation comes from the photosphere, which is the lowest portion of the atmosphere. By making use of the observed radiation flux and the equations for radiative energy transport, radiative equilibrium, and local thermodynamic equilibrium, a theoretical model can be constructed for the distribution of temperature and density with depth in the photosphere.

The photosphere is about 300 km thick, and its mean density is 3 × 10–4 kg/m3. The temperature of the photosphere decreases as the distance from the center of the sun increases; the mean temperature is of the order of 6000°K. The temperature is about 4200°K at the top of the photosphere. The pressure in the photosphere varies from 2 × 104 to 102 N/m2.

The existence of convection in the zone underlying the photosphere is evidenced by the photosphere’s nonuniform luminance and apparent granular structure, which is known as the photo-spheric granulation. The granules are bright patches of a more or less round shape that are visible in photographs of the sun taken in white light. The granules are 150–1,000 km in diameter and last for 5–10 min, although individual granules have been observed for up to 20 min. Sometimes the granules form clusters up to 30,000 km across. The granules are 20–30 percent brighter than the intergranule “lanes.” This difference corresponds to an average difference in temperature of 300°K. Unlike other formations, the photospheric granulation is the same at all heliographic latitudes and is independent of solar activity.

The speeds of the random motions in the photosphere are 1–3 km/sec, according to different determinations. Quasi-periodic radial oscillatory motions have been found in the photosphere. They occur in areas 2,000–3,000 km across and have a period of about 5 min and a velocity amplitude of the order of 500 m/sec. After several periods, the oscillations in a given place die out and may then begin again. Observations have also shown the existence of cells in which motion occurs in a horizontal direction from the center of the cell toward its edges. The speed of the outward flow is about 500 m/sec. The cells, called supergranules, are 30,000–40,000 km across. The supergranules coincide in position with the cells of the chromospheric network. The magnetic field is more intense at the edges of the supergranules. The supergranules presumably reflect the existence of convection cells of the same size at a depth of several thousand kilometers below the surface.

The photosphere was originally assumed to produce only a continuous spectrum, with absorption lines being formed in a reversing layer located above the photosphere. It was subsequently found that spectral lines as well as a continuous spectrum are formed in the photosphere. In order, however, to simplify the mathematics involved in calculating the spectral lines, the concept of the reversing layer is still sometimes used.

Sunspots and faculae. Sunspots and faculae are often observed in the photosphere. Sunspots are dark formations generally consisting of two parts: a darker core, called the umbra, and a surrounding less dark region, the penumbra. The diameter of a sun-spot may be as great as 200,000 km. Some sunspots are surrounded by a bright border. Very small sunspots are called pores. A sunspot’s lifetime varies from several hours to several months.

Even more absorption lines and bands are observed in sunspot spectra than in the spectrum of the photosphere. Sunspot spectra are reminiscent of the spectra of stars of spectral type KO. In what is known as the Evershed effect, the motion of matter in the spots is indicated by Doppler line shifts: gas flows outward from the spot’s center at lower levels and inward at higher levels at speeds reaching 3 × 103 m/sec. Comparison of the intensities of the lines and continuous spectra of sunspots and of the photosphere shows that sunspots have a temperature of 4500°K or less and are 1000°-2000°K cooler than the photosphere. Sunspots consequently appear dark against the background of the photosphere. The luminance of the core of a sunspot is 0.2–0.5 of the luminance of the photosphere, and the luminance of the penumbra is approximately 80 percent of that of the photosphere.

All sunspots have a strong magnetic field. Large sunspots may have fields as intense as 5,000 oersteds. Sunspots usually form groups, which, with respect to magnetic field, may be unipolar, bipolar, or multipolar. The multipolar groups contain many sun-spots of different polarities, with the spots often sharing a common penumbra.

Sunspot groups are always surrounded by faculae, flocculi, and prominences. Solar flares sometimes occur near sunspot groups, and ray and arch structures are observed in the corona above the groups. All these phenomena collectively form active regions on the sun.

The mean annual numbers of observed sunspots and active regions and the mean area occupied by sunspots vary with a period of about 11 years. This period is an average value, and the duration of individual cycles of solar activity varies from 7.5 to 16 years (see). The maximum number of spots simultaneously visible on the surface of the sun is different for different cycles. The maximum in one cycle may be more than twice as great as the maximum in another. Sunspots are generally found in the belts between 5° and 30° heliographic latitude on both sides of the solar equator. The first spots of a cycle occur at high latitudes in these belts, and the last spots appear at low latitudes while spots of the succeeding cycle are appearing at higher latitudes.

Bipolar sunspot groups are observed most often. Such groups consist of two large spots, called the leading and following spots, and often of several smaller spots as well. The leading and following spots of a group are of opposite magnetic polarity. In a given cycle, the polarities of the leading spots are all the same in one hemisphere and are opposite in the other hemisphere.

Sunspots apparently are depressions in the photosphere. The density of the matter in sunspots is less than the density of the matter in the photosphere at the same level.

Faculae are observed in active regions of the sun and are bright photospheric formations visible in white light primarily near the sun’s limb. They usually appear before sunspots and exist for some time after the disappearance of the spots. The area of a fa-cular region is several times greater than the area of the associated group of sunspots. The number of faculae on the solar disk depends on the phase of the solar activity cycle. Faculae have maximum contrast (18 percent) near, but not at, the limb. They are practically invisible in the center of the solar disk, where the contrast is very low. They have a complex, veined structure, and their visibility depends on the wavelength at which observations are conducted. The temperature of faculae is several hundred degrees higher than the temperature of the photosphere. The total radiation from 1 cm2 of a facula is 3–5 percent greater than the figure for the photosphere. Faculae apparently rise somewhat above the photosphere. The lifetime of an average facula is 15 days, but that of individual faculae may reach almost three months.

Chromosphere. The layer of the solar atmosphere that is located above the photosphere is called the chromosphere. Unless special telescopes with narrow-band light filters are used, the chromosphere is visible only during total solar eclipses. At such times, it appears as a rosy arc around the dark limb of the moon during the minutes when the moon completely covers the photosphere. The chromospheric spectrum can also be observed during an eclipse. The spectrum so observed is called the flash spectrum.

The chromosphere at the sun’s limb appears to the observer as an uneven fringe, from which “spikes,” called spicules, emerge. The spicules vary in diameter from 200 to 2,000 km and reach heights of the order of 10,000 km. The spicule plasma moves upward at speeds as high as 30 km/sec. Up to 250,000 spicules may exist simultaneously on the sun.

When observations are performed in monochromatic light, for example, the light of the ionized calcium line at 3,934 A, a bright chromospheric network is visible on the solar disk. This network consists of individual elements. The small elements are 1,000 km in diameter, and the large ones are 2,000–8,000 km in diameter. The large elements are clusters of small elements. The cells of the network are 30,000–40,000 km in diameter. The spicules are presumably formed on the borders of the cells.

When observations are made in the light of the red hydrogen line at 6,563 A, a characteristic vortical structure is seen in the chromosphere near sunspots.

The density of the matter in the chromosphere decreases with increasing distance from the center of the sun. The number of atoms per cm3 varies from 1015 near the photosphere to 109 in the upper chromosphere.

The spectrum of the chromosphere consists of hundreds of emission lines of hydrogen, helium, and metals. The strongest of these spectral lines is the red hydrogen Hα line at 6,563 Å and the H and K. lines of ionized calcium with wavelengths of 3,968 and 3,934 Å. The extent of the chromosphere is different for observations made in different spectral lines. In the strongest chromospheric lines, the chromosphere can be traced out to 14,000 km above the photosphere. Study of chromospheric spectra has led to the conclusion that the temperature is at a minimum in the transition layer between the photosphere and chromosphere, rises to 8000°–10,000°K above the base of the chromosphere, and reaches 15,000°–20,000°K at a height of several thousand km.

Turbulent motions of gas have been found to occur in the chromosphere at speeds of up to 15 × 103 m/sec. In the chromosphere, faculae in active regions are visible in the monochromatic light of the strong chromospheric lines as the bright formations usually called flocculi. The dark formations called filaments are easily seen in the Hα line. At the edge of the solar disk, the filaments extend beyond the disk and are observed against the background of the sky as bright prominences.

Filaments and prominences are most common in four zones that are symmetrically arranged relative to the solar equator: two polar zones to the north of +40° latitude and to the south of + 40° and two low-latitude zones at about ± 30° at the beginning of a cycle of solar activity and at about ± 17° at the end of a cycle. The filaments and prominences of the low-latitude zones exhibit a pronounced 11-year cycle, and their maximum coincides with the sunspot maximum. For the high-latitude prominences, the dependence on the phases of the solar activity cycle is less marked, and the maximum is reached two years after the sunspot maximum.

Filaments that represent quiescent prominences may be as long as one solar radius and may exist for several rotations of the sun. The mean height of prominences above the surface of the sun is 30,000–50,000 km; their average length is 200,000 km, and their average thickness is 5,000 kilometers.

A. B. Severnyi has found that prominences can be divided into three groups according to the character of the motion involved: electromagnetic prominences, in which motions occur along orderly curved trajectories that are lines of force of the magnetic field; random prominences, in which disorderly, turbulent motions predominate (with speeds of the order of 10 km/sec); and eruptive prominences, in which the material of an initially quiescent prominence with random motions is suddenly thrown out away from the sun at an increasing speed that reaches 700 km/sec.

The temperature in prominences or filaments is 5000°-10,000°K; the density is close to the mean density of the chromosphere. Filaments that are active, rapidly changing prominences usually undergo marked alteration over a few hours or even minutes. The form and character of the motions in prominences are closely connected with the magnetic field in the chromosphere and corona.

Corona. The corona is the outermost and most tenuous part of the solar atmosphere and extends more than ten solar radii. The corona can be observed during total solar eclipses, when it appears as a pearly white glow about the solar disk covered by the moon. The structural features of the corona stand out clearly; they include helmet streamers, plumes, rays, and polar brushes. Only with the invention of the coronagraph in 1931 did it become possible to observe the corona at times other than during eclipses.

The general shape of the corona varies with the phase of the solar activity cycle: during years of minimum activity, the corona is markedly drawn out along the equator; in years of maximum activity, the corona is almost spherical. In white light, the surface brightness of the solar corona is a million times less than the brightness of the center of the solar disk. The light of the corona results mainly from the scattering of photospheric light by free electrons. Practically all the atoms in the corona are ionized. The density of the ions and free electrons at the base of the corona is 109 particles per cm3.

The corona is heated in much the same way as the chromosphere. The greatest release of energy occurs in the lower portion of the corona. As a result, however, of the high thermal conductivity, the corona is almost isothermal, and the temperature decreases very slowly with increasing height. Energy is carried out of the corona in several ways. In the lower portion of the corona, the transport of energy downward through thermal conduction plays the principal role. The escape of the most rapid particles from the corona leads to a loss of energy. In the outer portions of the corona, much energy is carried away by the solar wind, which is an outflow of coronal gas. The speed of the solar wind increases with increasing distance from the sun: the speed is several km/sec at the surface of the sun and 450 km/sec at the distance of the earth.

The temperature of the corona exceeds 106°K. In active regions, the temperature is even higher and may reach 107°K. Coronal condensations, in which the particle density is increased by a factor of several tens, may form above active regions.

Part of the radiation of the inner corona is composed of emission lines of multiply ionized atoms of iron, calcium, magnesium, carbon, oxygen, sulfur, and other chemical elements. These lines are seen in both the visible and ultraviolet regions of the spectrum. The radio emission of the sun in the meter band and solar X-ray emission originate in the corona. These emissions are enhanced severalfold in active regions.

Calculations have shown that the corona is not in equilibrium with the interplanetary medium. The particle fluxes forming the solar wind stream out from the corona into interplanetary space.

A relatively thin transition layer exists between the chromosphere and corona. In this layer, the temperature rises sharply to the values characteristic of the corona. The conditions in the layer are determined by the energy flux from the corona as a result of thermal conduction. The transition layer is the source of most of the sun’s ultraviolet radiation.

The chromosphere, transition layer, and corona produce all the observed radio emission of the sun. In active regions, the structure of the chromosphere, corona, and transition layer is altered. This alteration, however, has not yet been sufficiently studied.

Flares. In active regions of the chromosphere, sudden and relatively short-lived increases in brightness are observed that are visible simultaneously in many spectral lines. These bright formations may last for several minutes to several hours and are called flares. They are best observed in the light of the Hα hydrogen line. The brightest flares, however, are sometimes visible even in white light.

The spectrum of a flare has several hundred emission lines of various elements, both neutral and ionized. The temperature of the layers of the solar atmosphere that produce light in the chro-mospheric lines is (1–2) × 104°K; in higher layers, the temperature reaches 107°K. The particle density in a flare reaches 10l3–1014 per cm3. The area covered by a flare may be as great as 1015 m2. Flares usually occur near rapidly developing groups of sunspots with magnetic fields of complex configuration. The occurrence of flares is accompanied by the activation of filaments and flocculi and by the ejection of material. The amount of energy released in a flare is very large and may reach 1024–1025joules. The energy of a flare is presumably initially stored in the magnetic field and then rapidly released. The energy release leads to localized heating and the acceleration of protons and electrons. These accelerated particles cause further heating of the gas, emission by the gas in various regions of the electromagnetic spectrum, and the formation of a shock wave.

Flares produce a considerable increase in the ultraviolet emission of the sun and are accompanied by bursts of X rays (sometimes very intense), by radio bursts, and by the ejection of particles with energies of up to 10’° electron volts. Bursts of X rays are sometimes observed without increased brightness in the chromosphere. Some flares, called proton flares, are accompanied by especially intense fluxes of energetic particles (solar cosmic rays). Proton flares pose a danger for astronauts because when the energetic particles collide with the atoms in the hull of a spaceship, bremsstrahlung, X rays, and gamma radiation are produced, sometimes in dangerous amounts.

Effect of solar activity on terrestrial phenomena. The sun is ultimately the source of all forms of energy used by mankind, except atomic energy. These forms include wind energy, the energy of falling water, and the energy released in the combustion of all types of fuel. Solar activity influences processes occurring in the atmosphere, magnetosphere, and biosphere of the earth in many ways (see).

Solar instruments. Observations of the sun are conducted by means of small-and medium-sized refracting telescopes and large reflecting telescopes. In these instruments, most of the optical components are fixed; the solar rays are directed into the horizontally or vertically positioned fixed telescope by means of one (in a siderostat or heliostat) or two (in a coelostat) moving mirrors. In the construction of large solar telescopes, special attention is devoted to high resolution with respect to the solar disk.

The coronagraph is a special type of solar telescope. The image of the sun is eclipsed within a coronagraph by an artificial “moon,” which is a special opaque disk. In a coronagraph, the amount of scattered light is reduced manyfold, and the outermost layers of the solar atmosphere can therefore be observed at times other than during eclipses.

Solar telescopes are often provided with narrow-band light filters that permit observation in the light of a single spectral line. Neutral filters have also been developed with radially variable transmittance; such filters permit observation of the solar corona at a distance of several solar radii.

The larger solar telescopes are usually equipped with large spectrographs with photographic or photoelectric recording of spectra. The spectrograph may also have a magnetograph, which permits study of the Zeeman splitting and polarization of spectral lines and makes possible determination of the magnitudes and directions of the magnetic fields on the sun.

In order to eliminate the blurring effect of the earth’s atmosphere and to investigate solar radiation in such spectral regions as the ultraviolet and infrared, which are absorbed in the earth’s atmosphere, orbiting observatories located outside the atmosphere have been developed. They permit spectra of the sun and of individual formations on its surface to be recorded beyond the earth’s atmosphere.

REFERENCES

Solntse, vol. 1. Edited by G. Kuiper. Moscow, 1957. (Translated from English.)
De Jager, C. Stroenie i dinamika atmosfery Solnlsa. Moscow, 1962. (Translated from English.)
Allen, C. W. Astrofizicheskie velichiny. Moscow, 1960. (Translated from English.)
Mustel’, E. R. Zvezdnye atmosfery. Moscow, 1960.
Severnyi, A. B. Fizika Solntsa. Moscow, 1956.
Zirin, H. Solnechnaia atmosfera. Moscow, 1969. (Translated from English.)
Allen, C. W. Astrophysical Quantities. 3rd ed. London, 1973.

E. E. DUBOV

What does it mean when you dream about the Sun?

The sun shining upon the dreamer indicates good fortune or goodwill. The sun is also energy, especially the life energy that gives one health and makes crops grow. Alternatively, excessive sunlight dries up and kills, as symbolized by animal skulls in the desert.

sun

[sən] (astronomy) The star about which the earth revolves; it is a globe of gas 8.65 × 105 miles (1.392 × 106 kilometers) in diameter, held together by its own gravity; thermonuclear reactions take place in the deep interior of the sun converting hydrogen into helium releasing energy which streams out. Also known as Sol.

Sun

See also Light.Apollosun god; his chariot ride spanned morning to night. [Gk. Myth.: Benét, 42]Aton (Aten)solar deity worshiped as the one god by Amenophis IV. [Egypt. Myth.: Parrinder, 33]Bastcat-headed goddess representing sun and moon. [Egypt. Myth.: Parrinder, 41]Belenussun god. [Celtic Myth.: Parrinder, 42]Butogoddess and mother of the sun and moon. [Egypt. Myth. Kravitz, 48]cockHelios’s sacred bird; sacrificed to the sun in Mexico. [Rom. and Mex. Myth.: Leach, 239]Cuchulainsun-figure and powerful fighter. [Irish Myth.: Parrinder, 68]double axsymbol of the sun. [Hindu and Western Folklore: Cirlot, 22]eaglesymbol represents the sun. [Gk. Myth.: Brewer Dictionary, 358]firerepresentation of the sun. [Western Symbolism: Cirlot, 105–106]goldcolor of the sun’s rays. [Color Symbolism: Jobes, 357]Heliossun in its astronomic aspects; aspect of Apollo. [Gk. Myth: Espy, 28]Hornssolar deity, portrayed as a hawk-headed man. [Egypt. Myth.: Benét, 478]HyperionTitan and father of the sun. [Gk. Myth.: Zimmer-man, 132]lionsymbol of the sun gods; corresponds to the sun. [Western Symbolism: Cirlot, 189–190]Mithra (Mithras)god of sunlight. [Persian Myth.: EB, VI: 944–945]Phaëthon Apollo’sson; foolishly attempted to drive sun chariot. [Gk. Myth.: Zimmerman, 202]Phoebusepithet of Apollo as the sun god. [Gk. Myth.: Benét, 42]Rapersonification of the sun. [Egypt. Myth.: Parrinder, 235]Solthe sun god. [Rom. Myth.: Zimmerman, 245]

sun

1. the star at the centre of our solar system. It is a gaseous body having a highly compressed core, in which energy is generated by thermonuclear reactions (at about 15 million kelvins), surrounded by less dense radiative and convective zones serving to transport the energy to the surface (the photosphere). The atmospheric layers (the chromosphere and corona) are normally invisible except during a total eclipse. Mass and diameter: 333 000 and 109 times that of earth respectively; mean distance from earth: 149.6 million km (1 astronomical unit) 2. any star around which a planetary system revolves 3. the sun as it appears at a particular time or place 4. the radiant energy, esp heat and light, received from the sun; sunshine 5. take or shoot the sun Nautical to measure the altitude of the sun in order to determine latitude
www.solarviews.com/eng/sun.htm
www.michielb.nl/sun/kaft.htm
www.hao.ucar.edu/public/education/education.html

Sun

Sun Microsystems

Sun

(Sun Microsystems, Inc., Santa Clara, CA, www.sun.com) A major manufacturer of Unix-based workstations and servers. In 2010, Sun was acquired by Oracle.

It all began in 1981 when Bavarian-born Andreas Bechtolsheim was licensing rights to a computer he designed. Named Sun for Stanford University Network and using off-the-shelf parts, it was an affordable workstation for engineers and scientists. In that year, he met Vinod Khosla, a native of India, who convinced him to form a company and expand. Khosla, Bechtolsheim and Scott McNealy, all Stanford MBAs, founded Sun in 1982.

Its first computers, the Sun-1 and subsequent Sun-2 were instant successes in the university market. Sun began to compete against its rival Apollo Computer, an east-coast workstation company, eventually surpassing it in sales (Apollo was later purchased by HP).

Sun has been a major force in open systems. Its computers have always run under Unix, which was licensed from AT&T and then later purchased outright. Sun and AT&T had formed such a tight alliance for a while that a host of Unix vendors formed the Open Software Foundation (OSF) in 1988 to keep Sun from dominating Unix.

In 1984, Bill Joy, head of R&D, designed NFS, which was broadly licensed and became the industry standard for file sharing. Sun later packaged its Unix components into a complete environment named Solaris, which it later ported to other platforms, including the Intel x86.

Sun used the Motorola 68K CPUs in its products until it designed its own RISC-based SPARC chips, which it launched with the SPARCstation 1 in 1989. Having gone through many iterations, SPARC CPUs are also made by Fujitsu and other third parties via licensing arrangements (see SPARC).

In the mid-1990s, Sun introduced the Java programming language and ushered in a new era for application development on the Internet (see Java and Java EE). See network computer and Sun-Netscape Alliance.


The Founders
From left to right: Vinod Khosla, Bill Joy, Andreas Bechtolsheim and Scott McNealy. Although Joy was not a founder, he was hired shortly thereafter and became one of Sun's major contributors. (Image courtesy of Sun Microsystems, Inc.)








The Sun-1
Sun's workstations were an instant success primarily in the university market. This led many professionals to the company who helped it grow steadily. (Image courtesy of Sun Microsystems, Inc.)








The First SPARCstation
In 1989, Sun introduced the SPARCstation 1, the first Sun computer that used the SPARC chip. (Image courtesy of Sun Microsystems, Inc.)








Sun JavaStation
Sun developed the Java programming language, and its network computer was aptly named. The JavaStation conformed to the NC Reference Profile and was available in several models. (Image courtesy of Sun Microsystems, Inc.)

Sun

(dreams)The sun sustains all life on Earth. When you see it in your dreams, it suggests that you are being nurtured and sustained by your environment and your life choices. It could also represent a spiritual force or the light of God. Sunrise may indicate new beginnings and a new wave of energy, while sunsets suggest a period of closure and completion. Sunlight in your dreams is never a negative symbol. Light always symbolizes or indicates consciousness and may connote masculine energy. Its presence, even in the most disturbing dreams, has a reassuring quality. Old dream interpretation books say that sun shining on you is an omen of good fortune and good will.

sun


sun

heliophobia.

Sun


Sun

A unit of length in Japan equivalent to approximately 30 millimeters.

SUN


AcronymDefinition
SUNSunday
SUNSunoco
SUNSunriver (Amtrak station code; Sunriver, OR)
SUNScaling Up Nutrition
SUNSoul of the Ultimate Nation (role-playing game)
SUNSecond University of Naples (Italy)
SUNStanford University Network
SUNSistema de Ubicación y Nivelación (Spanish: Location and Grading System; Guatemala)
SUNSeconda Università Degli Studi di Napoli (Italian: Second University of Naples; est. 1991)
SUNSaskatchewan Union of Nurses (Canada)
SUNService User Network (mental health)
SUNSouthern Utah News (Kanab, UT)
SUNSeattle Urban Nature (Washington)
SUNServices U Need (various locations)
SUNSurat Utang Negara (Indonesian: sovereign bond)
SUNSun Valley/Hailey, ID, USA (Airport Code)
SUNSenior Unlimited Nudes (San Francisco, CA)
SUNSunset Railway Company
SUNStudents United for Nature
SUNSeniors United Nutrition (Volusia County, Florida)
SUNShipping Unit Number (shipping)
SUNSearching for Unregistered Names

Sun


  • all
  • noun
  • verb
  • phrase

Synonyms for Sun

noun Sol

Synonyms

  • Sol
  • Helios
  • Phoebus
  • daystar
  • eye of heaven
  • Phoebus Apollo

noun sunshine

Synonyms

  • sunshine
  • sunlight
  • daylight
  • light
  • rays
  • warmth

phrase sun yourself

Synonyms

  • sunbathe
  • tan
  • bask

Words related to Sun

noun the star that is the source of light and heat for the planets in the solar system

Related Words

  • chromosphere
  • photosphere
  • solar system

noun the rays of the sun

Synonyms

  • sunlight
  • sunshine

Related Words

  • light
  • visible light
  • visible radiation
  • sunburst
  • sunbeam
  • sunray

noun a person considered as a source of warmth or energy or glory etc

Related Words

  • important person
  • influential person
  • personage

noun any star around which a planetary system revolves

Related Words

  • star

noun first day of the week

Synonyms

  • Dominicus
  • Lord's Day
  • Sunday

Related Words

  • day of rest
  • rest day
  • weekend

verb expose one's body to the sun

Synonyms

  • sunbathe

Related Words

  • lie

verb expose to the rays of the sun or affect by exposure to the sun

Synonyms

  • insolate
  • solarise
  • solarize

Related Words

  • expose
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