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enceladus_
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This excerpt is from "The Universe and the Atom" by Don Lichtenburg:
I was under the impression that photons made in the nuclear fusion bounced off of particles for a long time, before they inexplicably were able to escape from the sun. Why does the sun absorb the most energetic photons?
Also, before Einstein discovered the equivalence of matter and energy, how exactly did physicists of the world think that the Sun functioned (or any star for that matter)?
The two released positrons in these fusion reactions annihilate
against two electrons via the electromagnetic interaction, producing
energetic photons. The photons are absorbed in the sun, and less energetic
photons are emitted. Many absorption and reemission processes
take place, degrading the energies of the photons. Eventually,
most of the electromagnetic energy is radiated out into empty space,
much of it in the form of visible light.
I was under the impression that photons made in the nuclear fusion bounced off of particles for a long time, before they inexplicably were able to escape from the sun. Why does the sun absorb the most energetic photons?
Also, before Einstein discovered the equivalence of matter and energy, how exactly did physicists of the world think that the Sun functioned (or any star for that matter)?