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Difference of temperature between pole and equator of the sun

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dc.contributor.author Das, A. K
dc.contributor.author Abhyankar, K. D
dc.date.accessioned 2009-06-16T16:21:40Z
dc.date.available 2009-06-16T16:21:40Z
dc.date.issued 1953-09
dc.identifier.citation Nature, Vol. 172, No. 4375, pp. 496 - 497 en
dc.identifier.issn 0028-0836
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2248/4557
dc.description Restricted Access
dc.description.abstract BothEmden's/sup1 old hydrodynamic solar theory and the more modern thermo-hydrodynamical solar theory due to Bjerknes/sup2 lead to a higher temperature at the poles than at the equator of the sun. Bjerknes's theory is, however, more definite as regards the order of temperature difference to be expected. Bjerknes regards the sun as a baroclinic cosmic vortex in which there is a stratified circulation directed from the poles to the equator in the upper photospheric layer and a reverse circulation in the layer immediately below. According to him, sunspots, which he considers also to be vortices, originate in the sub-photospheric stratum; and the depth of a sunspot vortex is connected with the actual difference of temperature between the pole and the equator of the sun. This difference of temperature thus acquires a special importance in solar physics, and therefore an observational determination of this quantity is greatly to be desired. To our knowledge, no measurement of this quantity is so far available. The reason for this lacuna is perhaps to be found in the difficulty of measuring the temperature of the sun with the required degree of accuracy; for the usual methods of measuring the effective temperature of the sun cannot be trusted to give an accuracy greater than +/- 400° or 500°. But the temperature difference between the poles and the equator might be of the order of 100° or even less, so that some procedure capable of a higher precision is evidently required. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Nature Publishing Group en
dc.relation.uri http://www.nature.com/doifinder/10.1038/172496b0 en
dc.rights © Nature Publishing Group en
dc.subject Pole and Equator en
dc.subject Sun en
dc.subject Old Hydrodynamic Solar Theory en
dc.subject Modern Thermo-Hydrodynamical Solar Theory en
dc.subject Bjerknes's Theory en
dc.subject Baroclinic Cosmic en
dc.subject Photospheric Layer en
dc.subject Sunspots en
dc.subject Sunspot Vortex en
dc.subject Equator of the Sun en
dc.subject Solar Physics en
dc.title Difference of temperature between pole and equator of the sun en
dc.type Article en


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