No
The surface layer of the sun is the photosphere. The sun actually has no solid surface despite the fact that it looks solid.
The Sun is a ball of hot, glowing gases that do not have a distinct solid surface like planets. The boundary where the Sun's gases become less dense is known as the photosphere, but it's not a solid surface. It appears solid in images due to the way light is emitted and scattered by the gases in this outer layer.
The Sun does not have a surface as we know it, but a photosphere which is the visible surface of the Sun.
The visible outside part of the Sun can be said to be its surface. But the Sun doesn't have a solid surface on which you might stand, if that's what you mean. The "surface" we see is called the "photosphere".
No. There is nothing solid in the sun. It consists entirely of superheated gas.
Our sun is a star. A start does not have a solid surface, but is a ball of gas.
Solid. Pluto is composed primarily of rock and ice, and since it is cold that far from the sun, even the ice is a solid surface.
For example, it doesn't have a solid surface on which you can stand.
The sun does not have an outer crust as it is not solid. The "surface" of the sun, called the photosphere, is about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Without the Sun's light and heat, the surface of the Earth would freeze solid quite quickly, killing all life on the surface.
No, there are no rocks on the surface of the Sun. The Sun is primarily composed of hydrogen and helium gases, with extreme temperatures and pressure that prevent the formation of solid rock-like structures.
A solid or a liquid mixture which can be found under earth's surface.