Nuclear fusion reactions at the center of the sun produce gamma-ray photons with energies of order 1

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Nuclear fusion reactions at the center of the sun produce gamma-ray photons with energies of order 1 MeV (106eV). By contrast, what we see emanating from the sun's surface are visible light photons with wavelengths of order 500 nm. A simple model that explains this difference in wavelength is that a photon undergoes Compton scattering many times-in fact, about 1026 times, as suggested by models of the solar interior-as it travels from the center of the sun to its surface.
(a) Estimate the increase in wavelength of a photon in an average Compton-scattering event.
(b) Find the angle in degrees through which the photon is scattered in the scattering event described in part (a).
(c) It is estimated that a photon takes about 106 years to travel from the core to the surface of the sun. Find the average distance that light can travel within the interior of the sun without being scattered. (This distance is roughly equivalent to how far you could see if you were inside the sun and could survive the extreme temperatures there. As your answer shows, the interior of the sun is very opaque.)
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College Physics

ISBN: 978-0321601834

7th edition

Authors: Jerry D. Wilson, Anthony J. Buffa, Bo Lou

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