smithpa9 said:
My question is : How can a star that is almost completely made up of TWO elements, radiate at ALL frequencies? I'm not asking what H and He emission lines are. I'm asking why isn't that all you get when taking a spectroscopic reading of the Sun. Or why isn't that MOSTLY what you get, since that's MOSTLY what's in the Sun. What you actually get is a smooth distribution of light at all frequencies, with a peak somewhere in the yellow. I would expect you to get overwhelmingly strong peaks at the H and He emission lines. But you don't. Why?
I don't have anything to say that contradicts what russ said, but I would just like to talk about the thermal radiation from the surface of a star
suppose for simplicity the star is ALL hydrogen and suppose it has about the same temperature profile as the sun----in the outer partially ionized layers
the average temp they quote for sun is around 5700 kelvin but the outer layers are really a layercake of different temps----like any ocean or any atmosphere---so that 5700 they quote is some kind of "effective" temperature which gives a good one-number handle on things but does not tell the whole layercake story----for that you look in the handbook
so near the surface (the handbook says) there is a 7000 K layer and a 6000 layer and 5000 and a 4000 layer----the surface is not sharp defined and it has an "optical depth"
5000 is not hot enough to ionize all the H or even to keep all the atoms in an excited state! So it is a mixed bag.
in the surface there is some molecule H2 and also some molecule broken into some atomic H and also some
ionized, and some FREE ELECTRONS.
So be reductive-minded and think about a cloud of free electrons all by itself, in thermal motion, colliding and bouncing and buzzing around like crazy because very hot. A simple hot cloud of electrons, say 5700 kelvin, has a simple theory and it is going to for sure tell part of the story.
THAT CLOUD OF FREE ELECTRONS, in frantic thermal motion, IS GONNA DO THERMAL PLANCK BLACKBODY RADIATION: like one of thos suckers does not even know about a hyrdogen atom and its energy levels,he has totally forgotten the hydrogen atom context with its levels and spectral lines.
it is just loose, in random motion
and the most basic thneory of light says that random accelerations of charges radiates random wavelength photons
and Plancks 1900 or 1901 theory says black body is a continuous curve like a lopsided mound or a woman's breast
like a bell curve but lopsided skewed, so not like a bell curve
so think about thermal motion of hot electrons and think about
black body and come back and ask
it is a good question!