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and Laborde that 1 gram of radium emits 100 gram-calories per hour, and on the observation of Langley that each square centimetre of the sun's surface emits 8·28 × 10^6 gram-calories per hour. Since the average density of the sun is 1·44, the presence of radium in the sun, to the extent of 2·5 parts by weight in a million, would account for its present rate of emission of energy.

An examination of the spectrum of the sun has not so far revealed any of the radium lines. It is known, however, from spectroscopic evidence that helium is present, and this indirectly suggests the existence of radio-active matter also. It can readily be shown[1] that the absence of penetrating rays from the sun at the surface of the earth does not imply that the radio-elements are not present in the sun. Even if the sun were composed of pure radium, it would hardly be expected that the γ rays emitted would be appreciable at the surface of the earth, since the rays would be almost completely absorbed in passing through the atmosphere, which corresponds to a thickness of 76 centimetres of mercury.

In the Appendix E of Thomson and Tait's Natural Philosophy, Lord Kelvin has calculated the energy lost in the concentration of the sun from a condition of infinite dispersion, and concludes that it seems "on the whole probable that the sun has not illuminated the earth for 100,000,000 years and almost certain that he has not done so for 500,000,000 years. As for the future we may say, with equal certainty, that inhabitants of the earth cannot continue to enjoy the light and heat essential to their life for many million years longer, unless sources now unknown to us are prepared in the great storehouses of creation."

The discovery that a small mass of a substance like radium can emit spontaneously an enormous quantity of heat renders it possible that this estimate of the age of the sun's heat may be much increased. In a letter to Nature (Sept. 24, 1903) G. H. Darwin drew attention to this probability, and at the same time pointed out that, on Kelvin's hypotheses, his estimate of the duration of the sun's heat was probably much too high, and stated that, "The lost energy of the sun, supposed to be a homogeneous sphere of mass M and radius a, is (3/5)μM^2/a where μ is the constant of

  1. See Strutt and Joly, Nature, Oct. 15, 1903.