Electric Potential Earth and Sun?

In summary, Velikovsky believed that Venus was ejected from Jupiter, based on ancient mythology. The sun should be very strongly charged due to its plasma nature, but it is mostly neutral. Furthermore, unless you're doing very high-precision measurements, I would think you could assume the Sun's potential to be zero.
  • #1
NJV
39
0
Reading about Velikovsky's pseudoscience, I wondered what the values of the Earth and sun's electric potential really are?
 
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  • #2
Never really thought about it before, but the Sun should be very strongly charged. It is mostly plasma, meaning protons without electrons orbiting them. I don't know how many of those electrons are ejected into space as radiation, but I know that some are. This should leave the Sun with a very strong positive charge (relatve to Earth).

Now, I'm going to do a search on Velikovsky, to find out what you're talking about.
 
  • #3
Velikovsky believes that Venus was ejected from Jupiter and similar peculiarities, based on ancient mythologies. It's kind of interesting, but not scientific.
 
  • #4
The sun and the earth, I would imagine, are both electrically neutral to an enormous degree of precision. If even a fraction of a percent of the sun's mass was not neutral the electric attraction it would exert (even on neutral objects) would far outweigh its graviational attraction. The sun may be mostly plasma but that just means that the electrons aren't attached to a particular proton it by no means suggests that there are more electrons then protons present.
 
  • #5
LURCH said:
I don't know how many of those electrons are ejected into space as radiation, but I know that some are.

Yes, and so are protons. This makes the sun electrically neutral to a very good approximation.

Think about it. Once an electron is ejected, the sun becomes positively charged, and it becomes that much harder to eject the next electron, and that much easier to eject the next proton. Furthermore, it will be that much more likely to capture a passing electron and that much less likely to capture a passing proton. The system will very quickly reach an equilibrium.
 
  • #6
Yes, I thought that too when I read that. Although then again, protons have far greater mass and therefore require more energy to be expelled. Furthermore, despite its heat the sun isn't all fluid, with the core having a density 150 times that of water. I've read photons take about a million years to travel from the core to the surface. With such separation between core and surface, there might very well be a difference between the outer and inner layers. Of course there are relative potential differences in almost any spherical body, but I want to know what its potential relative to other spherical bodies would be.

(Of course Velikovsky was wrong and electromagnetism obviously plays no observable role in the movement of the planets.)
 
  • #7
NJV said:
I've read photons take about a million years to travel from the core to the surface.
Actually about 100,000 years, if I remember correctly... not that it matters much.

Anyway, unless you're doing very high-precision measurements I would think you could assume the Sun's potential to be zero. :-/
 
  • #8
Hm. Has that in any way been verified? It would certainly debunk Velikovsky's myths. A friend of mine is fascinated by them.
 
  • #9
because the universal gravitation constant G is over the order 10^-11 and the coulomb constant k is of the order 10^9. That means if there was even a single coulomb of free charge it would generate as much force as 10^20 kilograms! and the sun only weighs 10^30
 
  • #10
I suppose that decisively settles it. Thanks for your reply, starstrider!
 

1. What is electric potential?

Electric potential is a measure of the electric potential energy per unit charge at a specific point in an electric field.

2. How is electric potential related to Earth and the Sun?

The electric potential between Earth and the Sun is due to the difference in charges between the two bodies. The Sun has a positive charge and Earth has a negative charge, creating an electric potential between them.

3. What is the significance of electric potential in the Earth-Sun system?

The electric potential between Earth and the Sun plays a crucial role in maintaining the Earth's orbit around the Sun. The electric force between the two bodies keeps Earth in a stable orbit.

4. How is electric potential calculated in the Earth-Sun system?

The electric potential in the Earth-Sun system can be calculated using Coulomb's law, which relates the electric potential to the distance between the two bodies and the charges of each body.

5. Can changes in electric potential affect the Earth-Sun system?

Yes, changes in electric potential can affect the Earth-Sun system. For example, changes in the Sun's charge or variations in the distance between the two bodies can alter the electric potential and potentially impact the Earth's orbit.

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