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CHAPTER V
RADIATIVE EQUILIBRIUM
68 . Energy in the form of radiant heat and light is continually flowing
from the surface of a star into space. The surface layers of material cannot
continue to provide this energy for long unless their heat is replenished
from below. We are thus led to consider the process of transfer of energy
from the interior to the surface.
There are two modes of transfer of heat in material in static equilibrium,
viz. conduction and radiation. In both the net flow is in the direction of
the temperature gradient from high to low temperature. In both this flow
is the resultant of streams of energy in both directions ; the stream from
the high-temperature region is rather more intense than the stream from
the low-temperature region, and the difference constitutes the net flow.
In conduction molecules of the hotter region transmit their energy by
diffusion and collision to surrounding regions ; in radiation the hot material
emits aether waves which are absorbed in the surrounding regions. In
both cases this transmission is largely neutralised by a similar trans
mission from the surrounding regions, and the resultant transfer depends
on the slight preponderance of the flow from the hotter region.
A third mode of transfer is possible if the limitation to static equi
librium is abandoned. There may be a system of ascending and descending
currents in the star by which the material is kept stirred. Heat-energy
is then carried from one region to another by actual movement of the
matter carrying it—as in the lower part of our own atmosphere. If matter
through proximity to the surface loses more heat than can be replaced
by radiation and conduction so that it cools below the normal temperature
at its level, it will sink and be replaced by fresh unexposed material from
below. This mode of transfer is called convection.
It was recognised early that the conductivity of matter is much too
small to pass the necessary quantity of heat through the star. In the first
investigations of the stellar interior the importance of transfer by radiation
was not realised. Accordingly a system of convection currents was as
sumed to be present, and processes of transfer other than convection were
considered negligible. The star was said to be in convective (or adiabatic)
equilibrium. 69
69. On the hypothesis of convective equilibrium a definite relation
between the pressure, density and temperature at different levels can be
found. Consider an ascending current of material. By hypothesis there