The Sun Spins


Our star has slightly cooler regions called sunspots which rotate with the rest of the star. From the patterns, the average rotation rate of the Sun can be determined.


Solar viewing can be very dangerous.Sunglasses (even many in a row) and exposed camera film do NOT make it safe to watch.One approach is to hold binoculars to project to a white screen as shown in:


https://spaceweather.com/sunspots/doityourself.html


 


or


 


https://www.exploratorium.edu/sunspots/history4.html


 


You need a big piece of cardboard at the binoculars to put the viewing screen in darkness.


 


There are specific solar telescopes which have safe filters.Hydrogen alpha telescopes only let one red colour to be seen and that reveals interesting patterns, especially prominences which are pushed out of the Sun by magnetic fields.Those telescopes are expensive, but give a chance to show astronomy during lunch hour to other students.


https://solar-center.stanford.edu/observe/Safely-Observing-the-Sun-for-Yourself.pdf has a list of ways to safely observe the Sun. There are other brands than shown. If you are going to buy a solar telescope for student use, get it from an established astronomy store, rather than an unknown online discount provider. Do not use the ones with a solar filter at the eyepiece.You can get advice about that from people in your local RASC centre. ��


Before this activity, it�s useful if students have actually looked at the Sun over a few days and perhaps practiced sketching sunspots.If the Sun is observed near noon (1 PM if daylight time),the solar north pole is approximately up.However, sometimes during solar minimums,there are no sunspots for weeks at a time.���� https://spaceweather.com/ give the latest patterns.It might be worthwhile only doing this activity when there are sunspots.


 


https://solar-center.stanford.edu/spin-sun/spin-sun.html is an activity where students look at printed images of the Sun (or student sketches) over various weeks and observe the pattern of how the sunspots move. ��Or https://astroedu.iau.org/en/activities/2103/ has a comparable activity.


It suggests you get images from the SOHO satellite which was launched in 1995.and since then other missions to observe the sun have been launched such as the Solar Dynamic Observatory launched in 2010.�� A useful image for sunspots is:


https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/latest/latest_2048_HMIIC.jpg


The date and universal time (ie London England standard time) are given at the bottom.�� Each observatory records at a variety of different wavelengths corresponding to specific energy levels of atoms on the Sun.


https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/assets/img/latest/latest_2048_0171.jpg


shows the solar flares given off by the Sun.


After this activity,show this power point:


https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/fb72/ebf3b2083a06f0117865631d8d734ac67fbb.pdf


Add Powerpoint (not ready yet) showing


       

Prominences


       

Flares reaching Earth aurora displays


       

App to get aurora predictions


       

Carrington Event and effect on Earth if it happens again.