Why does the sun shine? |
Have you ever learned about why stars shine? Stars are made up of clouds of dust and gas in outer-space that spin around and are pulled inward by gravity. As the mixture of dust and gas compresses, it gets hotter and hotter until a special reaction occurs and some of the gas particles join together to become bigger particles! This process creates energy deep in the center of a star, and it’s that energy which gives a star its heat and shining light!
Sound like anything else you know?
If you think a hot, shining mass of energy also sounds a whole lot like the sun, then you’re right! – The sun, believe it or not, is a star too! And just like other stars shine because of all their energy, so does the sun!
However, you’ve probably noticed that the sun’s heat and light is different than that of other stars to those of us here on Earth. The sun’s light probably seems much brighter than other stars, and much hotter too! The reason we’re affected so differently by the sun’s energy is because we’re much closer to the sun! The sun is about 150 million kilometers away from Earth. That’s no short distance, but it’s closer than the next nearest star (in a group named Alpha Centauri), which is over four light years away! (That’s over 40 trillion kilometers – more than 260,000 times farther than the sun!)
Having the sun’s light and warmth is very important to a lot of things on Earth. For example, plants rely on sunlight for helping them to make food, which makes it possible for us to have food too when we eat the plants! The heat from the light of the sun is also responsible for keeping the Earth warm, so that we’re able to live on it! Having sunlight also gives us a daytime for being awake, and a nighttime for going to sleep!!
Fun in the sun!

- Green, Paul J. "Star." World Book Online Reference Center – Worldbook at NASA. 2005. World Book, Inc. 16 Feb. 2010
- Cain, Fraser. “What is a Star?” 2009. Universe Today. 16 Feb. 2010
- “Stars.” Astronomy & time – Astronomy fact files. 2002. National Maritime Museum. 16 Feb. 2010
- Cain, Fraser. “What is the Closest Star to Earth?” 2008. Universe Today. 16 Feb. 2010
- “Why Do We Study the Sun?” Exploring the Universe – Sun for Kids. 2007. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 16 Feb. 2010
- Cain, Fraser. “How Hot is the Surface of the Sun?” 2009. Universe Today. 16 Feb. 2010
- Cain, Fraser. “What the Sun Does For Us.” 2008. Universe Today. 16 Feb. 2010







