40,000 years taken for light to reach here?

In summary, the light that illuminates our planet is created through nuclear fusion in the sun's core and takes approximately 40,000 years to travel through the layers of the sun before reaching the solar atmosphere and streaming out into the solar system. This process involves random scattering and absorption of photons, leading to a longer travel time. However, individual photons always travel at the speed of light, c, and can be affected by the medium they pass through.
  • #1
adjacent
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http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a011500/a011537/
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said:
The light that illuminates our planet is made deep inside the sun and takes some 40,000 years to travel through the sun’s layers. Particles of light form from atoms undergoing nuclear fusion in the sun’s innermost layer known as the core. The light then flows through the sun’s interior for millennia, slowly bubbling up like water in a boiling pot. It eventually bursts past the sun’s surface, called the photosphere, and rises into the solar atmosphere. Once in the atmosphere—made up of the chromosphere and corona—the light streams out through the solar system.

This is so confusing. If light travels at the speed of light, c, then how can it take 40,000 year to get out from the sun?
Photons undergo fusion? hahaha. I never knew that
 
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  • #2
Because the photons do not travel in a straight line to the Earth, it is estimated that on average it takes 40K years. Because of extreme density and high energy, the photons "take the extreme scenic route" bouncing about "3 steps forward and 2 steps back" a truly ridiculous number of times and in seemingly random directions. Incompetent slackers, the lot.

*Whew ! I really need coffee!
 
  • #3
What about nuclear fusion of photons?
 
  • #4
I believe it means "atoms undergoing nuclear fusion". Also, it's not really correct to say it's all one photon involved in the 40,000 year trip. In fact, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_core:

The high-energy photons (gamma rays) released in fusion reactions take indirect paths to the Sun's surface. According to current models, random scattering from free electrons in the solar radiative zone (the zone within 75% of the solar radius, where heat transfer is by radiation) sets the photon diffusion time scale (or "photon travel time") from the core to the outer edge of the radiative zone at about 170,000 years. From there they cross into the convective zone (the remaining 25% of distance from the Sun's center), where the dominant transfer process changes to convection, and the speed at which heat moves outward becomes considerably faster. In the process of heat transfer from core to photosphere, each gamma ray in the Sun's core is converted during scattering into several million visible light photons before escaping into space.
 
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  • #5
adjacent said:
This is so confusing. If light travels at the speed of light, c, then how can it take 40,000 year to get out from the sun?
That's at best misleading. Here's a much better way to express this concept: It takes energy 40,000 years to escape from the Sun. (Only 40,000 years? I've read much longer time spans.) A single photon doesn't move all the way from the core to the Sun's photosphere. At the center of the Sun, a single photon moves but a tiny, tiny distance before it encounters something such as a proton that absorbs that photon. The proton will soon emit another photon, but in a random direction. Or it might emit two photons, or more. The incoming and outgoing photons are different. Different directions, and sometimes different frequencies. This process is repeated over and over and over. The energy created in the center of the Sun eventually does escape the Sun, put the path of that energy is a random walk.

The fusion in the core of the Sun creates gammas, extremely energetic photons. The energy is mostly in the form of visible and infrared photons by the time that energy reaches the Sun's photosphere. The photon flux is much greater at the Sun's surface than in the Sun's core because a large number of those infrared and visible photons are needed to equal the energy of one gamma.
Photons undergo fusion? hahaha. I never knew that
You misread. The article you cited says "Particles of light form from atoms undergoing nuclear fusion in the sun’s innermost layer known as the core." (Emphasis mine.) It's the atoms that undergo fusion, not the photons. The photons are created as part of the fusion process.
 
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  • #6
Oh, I understand now, thank you :smile:
lol, I misread it I thought the word "form" was a typo.
I read it like this: Particles of light from atoms, undergo nuclear fusion. :wink:
 
  • #7
[rant]

This is exemplary of what I don't like about popularizations of science. There would have been a lot less confusion had the authors of that site had used "energy" rather than "light". Moreover, "energy" is a better word. There are other forms of energy transport inside of stars besides radiation. Using "energy" covers both the convective and radiative regions of a star. Finally, the word "energy" is much less likely to result in the misinterpretation that photons somehow magically move at much less than the speed of light inside the Sun.

I know the problems with this popularization because I know the subject to some extent. But what about areas of science in which I don't know so much?

That's my key gripe with regard to these "quantum woo" popularizations. I know the popularizers intentionally mislead, at least in the areas in which I'm somewhat knowledgeable. It leads me to think that this misbehavior is universal across the sciences.

[/rant]
 
  • #8
If light travels at the speed of light, c...

Light doesn't always travel at 3*10^8 m/s...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/655518.stm

but this isn't relevant to the question why it takes 40,000 years for light to escape the sun.
 
  • #9
CWatters said:
Light doesn't always travel at 3*10^8 m/s...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/655518.stm
That's so interesting.
[off topic]I saw that in my dream. I slowed down light and made a machine which can view past,live.
 
  • #10
That's another one of those misleading "quantum woo" articles.

The collective behavior of photons and pseudo-particles such as phonons make "light" move slower in a medium, but it is not because photons move slower. Individual photons always travel at c. Always. However, individual photons lose their a bit of their individuality in a medium. We have an FAQ on this: https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=511177 .
 
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  • #11
D H said:
That's another one of those misleading "quantum woo" articles.
I see nothing woo-ish about the article. IMHO it's both accurate and interesting. It never mentions photons, you did.
 
  • #12
Bill, you know the subtleties that that article is addressing. Does a lay person?
 
  • #13
Science popularizations are not going away. Ordinary people are interested in this stuff and want intuitive explanations - a 'news bite', if you will. Analogies are a means to this end. Unfortunately, no analogy is perfect, and sometimes they are even ambiguous. Reality is always more complicated than any abbreviated description can convey, which is why mathematics is the language of choice in science. Mathematical descriptions are immune to the slipperiness inherent to words.
 
  • #14
well I'm definitely a lay person, but I now understand that it takes energy in some form starting at the core of the sun 40 thousand years more or less, Depending on the rout the energy takes through different kinds of soup to reach the Sun's photosphere where it might escape as light. Something I never knew. but cool.
 
  • #15
mongoak said:
well I'm definitely a lay person, but I now understand that it takes energy in some form starting at the core of the sun 40 thousand years more or less, Depending on the rout the energy takes through different kinds of soup to reach the Sun's photosphere where it might escape as light. Something I never knew. but cool.

Well, unless that energy is in the form of a neutrino. It only takes about 2 seconds for neutrinos to get out of the sun. (Reference the link in the next paragraph below)

Interestingly, I've read in the following link that it takes 170,000 years for photons to escape from the core, not 40,000. (http://physics.weber.edu/palen/Phsx1040/Lectures/Lsun.html) Wiki's article on the Sun says estimates range between 10,000 and 170,000 years.

Also, I believe we may be a bit mistaken in saying "energy" instead of "photons". Apparently there is a "photon diffusion time scale" along with a "Kelvin–Helmholtz time scale", the latter of which governs energy transport as a whole and takes a significantly longer time of 30 million years. (http://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1022952621810)

Per wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun

Since energy transport in the Sun is a process which involves photons in thermodynamic equilibrium with matter, the time scale of energy transport in the Sun is longer, on the order of 30,000,000 years. This is the time it would take the Sun to return to a stable state if the rate of energy generation in its core were suddenly to be changed.[59]
 
  • #16
Drakkith said:
Well, unless that energy is in the form of a neutrino. It only takes about 2 seconds for neutrinos to get out of the sun. (Reference the link in the next paragraph below)

Interestingly, I've read in the following link that it takes 170,000 years for photons to escape from the core, not 40,000. (http://physics.weber.edu/palen/Phsx1040/Lectures/Lsun.html) Wiki's article on the Sun says estimates range between 10,000 and 170,000 years.

Also, I believe we may be a bit mistaken in saying "energy" instead of "photons". Apparently there is a "photon diffusion time scale" along with a "Kelvin–Helmholtz time scale", the latter of which governs energy transport as a whole and takes a significantly longer time of 30 million years. (http://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1022952621810)

Per wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun

Since energy transport in the Sun is a process which involves photons in thermodynamic equilibrium with matter, the time scale of energy transport in the Sun is longer, on the order of 30,000,000 years. This is the time it would take the Sun to return to a stable state if the rate of energy generation in its core were suddenly to be changed.[59]

The actual photon diffusion time is pretty model dependent, so various estimates may give different results.

The Kelvin-Helmholtz time would be the time it took the Sun to lose all of its currently stored thermal energy given its current luminosity.

The large difference between the Kelvin-Helmholtz time and the photon diffusion time shows you that most of the thermal energy of the Sun is stored in the atoms themselves and not in the photon field.
 
  • #17
Ah, that makes sense. Thanks, Matterwave.
 

1. How is it possible for light to take 40,000 years to reach us?

The speed of light is approximately 186,282 miles per second. However, the vastness of the universe means that even at this incredible speed, it takes a significant amount of time for light to travel long distances. In the case of 40,000 years, it means that the light we are seeing has been traveling through space for that amount of time before reaching our eyes.

2. How do we know that the light we see is actually 40,000 years old?

Scientists are able to determine the age of light by measuring the distance between the source of the light and our location. This is done through various methods, such as using parallax measurements or analyzing the redshift of the light. Based on these calculations, we can estimate the age of the light that reaches us.

3. What objects in space could be responsible for emitting light that takes 40,000 years to reach us?

There are many objects in space that could emit light that takes 40,000 years to reach us. One example is a star that is located 40,000 light-years away from Earth. It could also be light from a distant galaxy or even remnants of the Big Bang that occurred approximately 13.8 billion years ago.

4. How does the time it takes for light to reach us impact our understanding of the universe?

The time it takes for light to reach us from distant objects allows us to study the history and evolution of the universe. By observing objects that are located at different distances, we can see how they appeared at various points in time. This helps us gain a better understanding of the formation and development of the universe.

5. Could there be objects in the universe that emit light that takes longer than 40,000 years to reach us?

Yes, there are objects in the universe that emit light that takes much longer than 40,000 years to reach us. For example, the light from the farthest known galaxy has been traveling for 13.4 billion years to reach us. This means we are seeing the galaxy as it appeared over 13 billion years ago. There could also be objects even farther away that we have not yet discovered, and their light could take even longer to reach us.

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