D H said:
This result led to a significant controversy between physicists, geologists, and biologists in the latter part of the 19th century. Based on this thermal timescale, Kelvin deduced that the Earth was no more than 10 million years old. This was completely wrong. Fusion, which Kelvin didn't know about, was the key to solving this controversy.
I know that, I referred to it above, in this very thread.
Ken G, you are ignoring this history, and you are distorting fact. To say that the fusion rate has nothing to do with fusion is beyond ludicrous.
I'm not clear on how I could be ignoring history, when I first described that history. What's more, I showed why it supports my point. Do you have a more specific question about that connection?
Getting back to the original post, the reason that the Sun produces energy comparable to a warm compost pile is because fusion in the Sun is rather improbable.
Now ask the next question-- why is that? The answer is simple: because improbable fusion is the only kind necessary to replace the heat lost by the diffusion of light out of the interior of the Sun, the latter effect being what determines the luminosity of any star where radiative diffusion is the dominant energy transport mechanism over the body of the object. Let me again summarize the arguments that make this completely clear:
1) stars on their "Henyey track" (like all main-sequence stars with solar mass or more) have luminosities that do not sensitively depend on their state of evolution, including whether or not they are undergoing any type of fusion.
2) Eddington understood the luminosity of the Sun rather well, without knowing fusion existed
3) there is no trace on the main sequence where stars go from p-p fusion to CNO fusion, even though those two flavors of hydrogen fusion involve completely different physics, and completely different degrees of "how probable" fusion is.
The reason for all three of these points is simple: fusion is self-regulated to replace the heat lost by radiative diffusion, and it does just that, quite insensitively to the details of how fusion occurs. Indeed, if fusion is not occurring at all, it just means that gravitational contraction provides the heat instead of fusion. The luminosity is rather unaffected, that's the whole point of the "Henyey track," which applies both before, during, and in some cases even after, core fusion is going on.
I realize that most people don't know this, which is why I'm helping out. "Ignoring history"? No, I'm just ignoring common misconceptions about how stars work.
Larger stars get around this bottleneck via the CNO cycle. Our Sun is too small to make use of this reaction. Fusion in our Sun relies primarily on the proton-proton (p-p) chain, and that is why our Sun produces energy comparable to a warm compost pile.
And that is a classic example of the kind of misconception I'm talking about. Many people think stars that undergo CNO fusion are more luminous because they undergo CNO fusion instead of p-p fusion. But that's quite wrong, even a main-sequence star with no trace of carbon in it would have virtually the same luminosity that it does have. Again, the reason is because fusion only replaces the heat lost by radiative diffusion-- it makes little difference what the fusion mechanism is, it will self-regulate either way. Without CNO fusion, a high-mass star would need a higher core temperature to be on the main sequence, but this will influence its luminosity very little-- indeed that is the whole point of a Henyey track.