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Rob: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm
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Rob
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Neil: and I'm Neil. Hello.
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Rob: Hello, Neil, and what a glorious sunny day
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it is today. Not a cloud in the sky! Spring is definitely here! Now, Neil, you're a bit
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of a sun worshipper, aren't you? You like sunbathing...
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Neil: I do indeed! I love sitting in my deckchair
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in the garden, catching some rays...
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Rob: Hmm, yes, you look a bit orange actually.
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Are you sure that tan's not fake?
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Neil: Very cheeky, Rob, very cheeky...
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Rob: Now the reason I mentioned sunbathing is because
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we're discussing the sun in this programme.
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Neil: Yes, that's right. The sun is our nearest
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star ─ although it's a staggering 150 million kilometres away. Earth is one of nine planets
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that orbit ─ or circle around ─ the sun. And life on Earth couldn't exist without its
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warmth and light.
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Rob: And we should mention... The sun is absolutely
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massive. Its volume is so large you could fit a million Earths inside it.
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Neil: That's amazing! It's also incredibly hot.
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Hotter than anything you could imagine.
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Rob: So Neil, can you answer this question: How
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hot is the surface of the sun? Now I'll help you out by telling you that the sun's core
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─ that's the centre ─ is a blistering five million degrees Celsius. But how hot
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is the sun's surface? Is it...
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a) 1.5 billion degrees Celsius b) 1.5 million degrees Celsius or
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c) 5500 degrees Celsius
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Neil: Hmm. I have no idea. They all sound quite
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warm to me. But ... I think it must be a bit cooler than the core. So I'm going to go for
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1.5 million degrees.
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Rob: Okay. Well, we'll find out if you're right
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or wrong later on. But now let's listen to Professor of Solar Physics Louise Harra to
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discover what the sun is made of.
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Louise Harra: It's just a big ball of gas. And we measure
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it... it's made mostly of hydrogen. So it's roughly
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90% hydrogen, it's maybe 8% helium, and the rest of it's made up of things like iron,
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carbon, oxygen, nickel.
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Neil: So the main gas is hydrogen, which accounts
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for 90% of the sun's matter. Now, 'matter' means what something is made of.
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Rob: And hydrogen creates all the sun's energy.
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Heat and light energy is created all the time in the sun's core as a result of gas explosions
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or nuclear reactions. And this bit is hard to believe ─ it takes a hundred thousand
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years for this light energy to travel from the sun's core to the sun's surface.
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Neil: But once it reaches the sun's surface ─ the
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photosphere ─ it can escape. In fact, it takes only eight minutes for light energy
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from the sun to reach the Earth. Scientists these days are able to see the photosphere
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in fantastic detail using powerful telescopes.
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Rob: Though Galileo observed dark spots on the
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sun through his telescope several hundred years ago, didn't he? Which brings us on to
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another question: How old is the sun?
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Neil: Well, I happen to know that it came into being
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around four and a half billion years ago.
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Rob: Did you study solar physics at university,
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Neil?
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Neil: No, just... you know, just general knowledge.
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Rob: Well, the sun came into being ─ or was created
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─ a very long time ago! We're going to hear now from Professor of Physics, Yvonne Elseworth.
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What does she say about how long the sun is going to stay the same?
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Yvonne Elseworth: In terms of its current lifestyle it's here
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for as long again, so we're about half way through. And then it becomes a different sort
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of star ─ it becomes a giant star and that's probably curtains for us, actually. It'll
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get a bit warm, a bit toasty, and we'll get enveloped in the sun, and it won't be nice...
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Neil: So the sun is going to stay the same for another
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four and a half billion years. But the professor also says that the sun will change. When it
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becomes a giant star, it will be curtains for our planet ─ and 'curtains' means the
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end, I'm afraid!
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Rob: Yes, it does. And as a giant star, the sun
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will get hotter ─ it will make the Earth toasty. Now, toasty usually means hot in a
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nice way.
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Neil: That's right ─ for example, my toes are
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warm and toasty in my new slippers. But in reality the giant sun will make the Earth
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unbearably hot. It will surround ─ or envelop ─ our planet and burn it up.
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Rob: Well, I'm glad we're not going to be around
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when that happens. Now, remember at the beginning of the show I asked you how hot is the sun's
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surface? Is it a) 1.5 billion b) 1.5 million or c) 5500 degrees Celsius?
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Neil: And I said 1.5 million...
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Rob: It's way too hot, I'm afraid you were wrong.
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The answer is actually 5500 degrees Celsius. But still, if you're planning on visiting
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the sun, remember to take your sunglasses and plenty of sunscreen! Now, before we go,
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it's time to remind ourselves of some of the vocabulary that we've heard today. Neil.
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Neil: orbit, massive, core, energy, matter, photosphere,
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come into being, curtains for something, toasty, envelop
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Rob: Thanks. Well, that brings us to the end of
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today's 6 Minute English. We hope you enjoyed today's programme. Please join us again soon.
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Bye bye.
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Neil: Bye.