The film opens with Dr. Research (
Dr. Frank C. Baxter) and the Fiction Writer (
Eddie Albert) meeting Father Time (
Lionel Barrymore) and Mr. Sun (
Marvin Miller) who explain that time started a few billion years ago and that the Sun is a
star. Mr. Sun explains that he was worshipped as various gods (
Shamash,
Mithra,
Ra and
Apollo) until
Anaxagoras proclaimed the Sun was a very hot stone and not a god. Logic and reasoning were the beginning of the end of worshiping the Sun as
algebra and the
astrolabe were used to study the heavens. Dr. Research explains that the
Sun is 93 million miles away and its light takes 8 minutes to reach the Earth. Light from the next closest star,
Alpha Centauri, takes more than 4 years to get to Earth at a speed greater than 186,000 miles per second. The Sun weighs the same as about 330,000 Earths and is 95%
hydrogen and
helium gas and is not solid. The Sun is compressed by
gravity so tightly that the gas at the center is more than 100 times heavier than water with a pressure of one billion tons per square inch while the surface is about one pound per square inch. The center of the Sun is 30 million degrees Fahrenheit while the surface is only 10,000 degrees, but the
corona is 1 million degrees Fahrenheit though
nobody knows why, so scientists study the Sun's corona during each
solar eclipse.
Dr. George Ellery Hale and
Dr. Henri Deslandres both developed the
spectroheliograph—independently—to study the Sun in different
wavelengths of
light related to specific
atoms.
Dr. Robert R. McMath of the
McMath–Hulbert Observatory used a spectroheliograph to make
time-lapse films of the
prominences on the Sun. Using pictures from the
Mount Wilson Observatory, and others, scientists have learned about
sunspots first described by
Galileo. Sunspots often appear in pairs and are about 7,000 degrees rather than the normal 10,000 degrees. The spots increase and decrease in a cycle of about 11.2 years. Studying sunspots has shown the equator rotates faster than the poles at around 25 and 1/3 days per rotation. Halfway between the equator and the poles takes about 27 and 1/2 days per rotation though nobody understands why.
Dr. Bernard Lyot developed the first
coronagraph to study the Sun's corona. Improved coronagraphs are used at the
High Altitude Observatory by
Dr. Walter Roberts and at the
Evans Solar Facility by
Dr. J. W. Evans.
Dr. Donald H. Menzel was the first to use the coronagraph in America. These coronagraphs are used to film structures on the Sun called
prominences and
spicules which show matter flowing on the surface in structures many times the size of the Earth. Often matter appears from nowhere to flow down into a sunspot which is sometimes referred to as
Coronal Rain. The largest recorded prominence was captured at the High Altitude Observatory in Colorado on June 4, 1946 as it left the Sun at 400,000 miles per hour. The Sun is also studied in
radio frequencies using
radio astronomy.
Dr. E. G. Bowen helped pioneer radio astronomy which showed that many places in outer space emit radio waves. When
solar flares erupt from sunspots they emit
ultraviolet radiation, which reach the Earth in 8 minutes, and
electrified fragments of atoms which take around 30 hours. These fragments of atoms are diverted by the
Earth's magnetic field, towards the North and South poles which causes the
Aurora.
Dr. C. W. Gartlein of Cornell University took some of the first motion pictures of the
Aurora Borealis. These solar flares cause disruption in
electricity and radio communications because of disturbances of the
ionosphere. Because of this, the Sun is monitored from 22 stations around the world which send data to the
Radio Storm Warning Service of the
National Bureau of Standards to determine when a
solar storm will reach the Earth. The Earth receives one billion dollars of
solar energy from the Sun every second when the rate is $0.02 per kilowatt-hour. The Earth receives only one two-billionth of the total energy output by the Sun, which is about 500,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
horsepower. The Sun generates this energy through
thermonuclear reactions roughly equal to 10,000
hydrogen bombs going off every second and has been doing so for the last 4 billion years.
Dr. Hans Bethe, in 1938, was the first to determine this fact. Every second, the Sun converts 564 million tons of hydrogen into 560 million tons of helium with the remaining 4 million tons being converted into energy in the form of
light,
heat and
radiation.
Thermo the Magician enters to explain the
carbon cycle whereby hydrogen atoms are converted into helium atoms by fusion reactions with
carbon atoms. At 30 million degrees, one hydrogen and one carbon combine into
nitrogen. Adding two hydrogens to the nitrogen creates
oxygen. The oxygen combines with another hydrogen to create helium and carbon, and in the process releases energy. Dr. Research then mentions combining two hydrogen atoms directly into a helium atom in the
proton-proton process. Dr. Research continues, telling how science believes the Sun started as a loose cloud of hydrogen gas compressed by gravity and this compression raised the temperature until it reached 30 million degrees and started the thermonuclear reaction. The nuclear reactions expand the Sun and gravity compresses it until the two forces reach a balance. The Sun has only used small portion of its hydrogen and has about 98% of it left which will take about 50 to 100 billion years until it is gone and the Sun dies. Science is depending on the Sun for the solution to man's two biggest problems, the first problem being food. The population of the Earth went from 500 million in 1650 to 2.5 billion in 1950. One out of every twenty human beings that ever existed, is currently alive today. Two out of every three people don't have enough to eat which is required for good health and 100 million new humans are born each year becoming a
population explosion. Food is grown by the Sun through
photosynthesis, which means
putting together with light. Ninety-nine percent of all food and fuel is created by the Sun through photosynthesis.
Chlorophyll is the
molecule responsible for photosynthesis though science isn't exactly sure how it works. They believe chlorophyll uses sunlight to combine
carbon dioxide molecules with
water molecules, along with salts, to create sugars and release oxygen. These sugars form the bulk of a plant including its fruit. Most of these plants are grown in the sea as
phytoplankton, which is the food source of
zooplankton, which are eaten by fish. All animals survive on food created by the Sun through photosynthesis; either directly by eating plants, or indirectly by eating animals that eat plants. The Sun provided the energy for photosynthesis through its light, which was created at the Sun's core. It takes this light 2000 years to make it from the core to the Sun's surface and another eight minutes from the Sun's surface to the Earth. The food problem is being studied by
Dr. Hiroshi Tamiya of the
Tokugawa Biological Institute in his research on
chlorella, an algae consisting of
carbohydrates,
fats and 50%
protein. Chlorella can produce about 10 times the edible material, per unit area, as a typical crop. The second biggest problem man faces is that of
fuel. In 1850, the average American used 400 horsepower-hours of fuel. By 1950, the average American used 10,000 horsepower-hours of fuel. It's estimated that by 1975 an average American will use 20,000 horsepower-hours of fuel.
Solar energy will be a likely solution and research by
Dr. Charles Greeley Abbot produced a
solar powered engine. The French
solar furnace at Mont-Louis is used for high-temperature research of metals. The Indian scientist
Dr. S. Bhatnagar experimented with solar ovens for cooking food and
Dr. Mária Telkes developed a home that used
Solar heating exclusively. Research is being conducted by
Dr. Lawrence J. Heidt of
MIT using sunlight along with
perchloric acid to decompose water into hydrogen and oxygen so that it can be burned to produce energy. The waste product would be water that can be fed back into the system to create a continuous loop powered by solar energy.
Dr. E. I. Rabinowitz developed a
photogalvanic cell using
thiamine and
iron salts while working at MIT.
Thermocouples and
phosphorescent wallpaper are other possible solutions to certain energy needs.
Atomic power plants and especially
breeder reactors can also provide some energy needs. In the end though, solar power will be the only solution on a long-term scale; otherwise society will have to go back to a muscle-powered existence as it was when humans and animals provided the energy to run things. Ironically, although the
photovoltaic cell had been invented at Bell Labs two years before the film was made, it was not included in the original version of the film. It was added, however, in a slightly updated version of the film, where the "solar battery" is discussed. Based on the work of scientists Daryl Chapin, Calvin Fuller, and Gerald Pearson at Bell Labs, this device can turn sunlight directly into electricity. A cartoon version of Dr. Research dressed as a pastry chef shows how the solar battery can be manufactured by "cooking-up" a wafer of silicon with a boron coating. (This became the predecessor of today's ubiquitous solar cells). The film ends with Dr. Research and Father Time providing an overview. That human curiosity has helped drive scientific achievements and that it's important to ask questions of both science and religion. ==Cast==