• @Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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    89 months ago

    How do we know what the layers of the sun and earth are, and how hot they are? What methods were used to gain (or theorize) this information?

    • @cogman@lemmy.world
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      279 months ago

      The sun is based on physics and observing nebula and super novas. We know how much the sun weighs based on it’s gravitational pull. We know what it’s currently burning given the frequency of the light it emits. We know what generation it is based on the elements in the planets. And we know the contents of other stars by the light they emit when they explode and collapse.

      We know the layers of the earth because we can bounce sounds off the earth’s core to see how deep it is. We know roughly what it’s made of because we know how much the earth weighs and that the earth has a magnetosphere (you only get that with certain metals).

      The methods used are generations of built up knowledge in physics and astrophysics.

      You can, of course, just google these questions and get better answers than my summation

      https://manoa.hawaii.edu/exploringourfluidearth/physical/ocean-floor/layers-earth#:~:text=There is evidence that the,generated by earthquakes or explosions.

    • @Umbrias@beehaw.org
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      39 months ago

      Loss and lots of science and math to model and simulate the sun in a variety of ways slowly weeding out the models that weren’t making experimentally validated predictions. I’m not sure how many astronomers are around, especially sun focused ones, on Lemmy to answer you more specifically about the history of sun science.