No. The large arch-like eruptions your thinking of are called solar flares. Eclipses are alignments of the Earth, Moon, and Sun. Sunspots are also different. Sunspots are areas on the Sun that are of a different colors that do cause magnetic interruptions of cell phone use, internet, etc... Solar flares (Arch-like eruptions) cause changes in temperature and usually bring extreme heats.
The sun don't really need sunspots cause sunspots are related to several features on the sun's surface but prominences and solar flares need sunspots.Sunspots are the places where the magnetic field lines of the Sun poke out of the Sun to form loops.Where they poke out they are seens as prominences against the edge of the Sun's visible disk during an eclipse of the Sun.The looped magnetic field lines contain energy and are unstable, When they break and reconnect they release this energy suddenly and cause solar flares.
No it has no connection with Volcanic Eruptions........... A orange moon is really just a lunar eclipse, which is when the sun, moon, and earth are lined up. The moon turns red because it is in the earths shadow.
The corona on the Sun is the plasma aura that surrounds the Sun. It extends millions of kilometers into space and has extremely high temperatures.
You can breed a Lunar Eclipse dragon using the following combinations: Lunar Eclipse and Lunar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse and Solstice, Equinox and Lunar Eclipse, Blue Moon and Lunar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse and Solar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse and Moon, and Lunar Eclipse and Sun.
The soler eclipse is diffrent from the normal eclipse because the soler eclipse is when the moon crosses the sun and the normal eclipse is when the sun crosess the moon.
The sun don't really need sunspots cause sunspots are related to several features on the sun's surface but prominences and solar flares need sunspots.Sunspots are the places where the magnetic field lines of the Sun poke out of the Sun to form loops.Where they poke out they are seens as prominences against the edge of the Sun's visible disk during an eclipse of the Sun.The looped magnetic field lines contain energy and are unstable, When they break and reconnect they release this energy suddenly and cause solar flares.
Astronomers have known for many years that sunspots are "storms" on the sun's surface, and also that solar prominences seen flaring from the sun during an eclipse probably come from sunspots. what they do not know - yet - is why the sunspots occur in farily regular cycles of many, gradually diminishing to few, and then rising again to many. Times of high sunspot activity are usually also times of high Northern Lights activity and radio interference on earth.
Mercury is normally lost in the glare of the sun unless there is a solar eclipse
The sun is always "full" except during an eclipse. The sun generates its own light, and it does so all the time and across its entire surface (sunspots excepted). Like a gigantic fusion-powered lamp, it's "on" all the time.
No it has no connection with Volcanic Eruptions........... A orange moon is really just a lunar eclipse, which is when the sun, moon, and earth are lined up. The moon turns red because it is in the earths shadow.
The corona on the Sun is the plasma aura that surrounds the Sun. It extends millions of kilometers into space and has extremely high temperatures.
No. An eclipse of the sun is called a solar eclipse. A lunar eclipse is an eclipse of the moon.
eclipse is of two kinds- solar eclipse and lunar eclipse
You can breed a Lunar Eclipse dragon using the following combinations: Lunar Eclipse and Lunar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse and Solstice, Equinox and Lunar Eclipse, Blue Moon and Lunar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse and Solar Eclipse, Lunar Eclipse and Moon, and Lunar Eclipse and Sun.
Reference http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunspot A sunspot is a region on the Sun's surface (photosphere) that is marked by intense magnetic activity, which inhibits convection, forming areas of reduced surface temperature. They can be visible from Earth without the aid of a telescope. Although they are at temperatures of roughly 4,000-4,500 K, the contrast with the surrounding material at about 5,800 K leaves them clearly visible as dark spots, as the intensity of a heated black body (closely approximated by the photosphere) is a function of T (temperature) to the fourth power. If a sunspot were isolated from the surrounding photosphere it would be brighter than an electric arc.
No. An eclipse of the sun is called a solar eclipse.
The soler eclipse is diffrent from the normal eclipse because the soler eclipse is when the moon crosses the sun and the normal eclipse is when the sun crosess the moon.