There is not really a "surface" to the Sun. Think of it this way: the Sun is a bunch of gas which gets denser and denser as you move from space toward the solar core. The photosphere would then represent the depth at which we can see no deeper toward the core. Think of what a thick cloud looks like when you look down on it from an airplane - it looks solid, but it isn't.
The Parts of a Star
The Sun's atmosphere changes from being transparent to being opaque over a distance of only a few hundred kilometers. This is remarkable given the size of the Sun, and represents such a huge change that we often think of it as a true boundary. When we speak of the size of the Sun, we usually mean the size of the region surrounded by the photosphere. The photosphere is slightly different from one place on the Sun to another, but in general is has a pressure about a few hundredths of the sea-level pressure on Earth, a density of about a ten-thousandth of the Earth's sea-level atmospheric density, and a temperature in the range 4500-6000 Kelvin.
The ChromosphereThe gases which extend away from the photosphere make up the chromosphere. These gases are transparent to most visible radiation. The chromosphere is about 2500 km thick. The density of the gases decreases as you move away from the photosphere into the chromosphere, but the temperature increases! From the bottom to the top of the chromosphere, the average temperature goes from 4500 to 10,000 Kelvin! Needless to say, this rise was not anticipated by scientists when they first measured it. Throughout the rest of the Sun, temperature decreases as you move further away from the core.The Solar Corona seen during
a total eclipse
The CoronaThe chromosphere merges into the outermost region of the Sun's atmosphere, the corona. The corona extends for millions of miles into space above the photosphere. Usually, we cannot see the corona because of the brightness of the photosphere. However, during a total solar eclipse, the corona shines beautifully against the dark sky. The corona has a density about 0.0000000001 times that of the Earth's sea-level atmosphere. It is very hot - millions of Kelvin. Because of this high temperature, the bulk of the radiation from the corona is emitted atultraviolet and X-ray wavelengths. Magnetic fields on the Sun seem to play an important part in heating the gas to such a high temperature. However, the exact way that this happens is not well understood. The image you see to the left was taken during a solar eclipse in 1980; lightfrom the photosphere is blocked out by the Moon (the dark disk). A Few Other Solar FeaturesThe Solar WindThe solar wind is nothing more than a stream of charged particles flowing outward from the Sun with an average velocity of about 400 km/sec. It is a natural consequence of the Sun being so hot - the corona gas has too much energy to be gravitationally bound to the Sun. Sunspots and Their CycleSunspots are cooler regions on the Sun's photosphere (about 1500 K cooler) and so appear to be darker than the photosphere. A given sunspot can have a lifetime ranging from a few hours to a few months. It consists of two parts - the dark inside region called the umbra and the surrounding less dark region called the penumbra. Their sizes vary over a wide range, with a few having been measured to be 50,000 km in diameter!A German amateur astronomer, Heinrich Schwabe, published a paper in 1851 which stated that the number of sunspots visible on average varied with a period of about 10 years. This conclusion has been substantiated by observations over the 140 years since. The period of repetition on average is 11.1 years, but has been as short as 8 years and as long as 16 years.
The function describing earth's orbit round the sun is that for an ellipse.
No. The sun is firmly held together by gravity.
The sun does not have an atmosphere - it is a star, not a planet. It is a ball of burning gas.
core and atmosphere
the two parts of the core are the inner core and the outer core
Sun dial and a clock?
The sun shines more or less directly on parts of the earth as a function of the earth's axial tilt relative to the ecliptic, and of the earth's diurnal rotation on its axis.
what are the four main parts of a keyboard and their function what are the four main parts of a keyboard and their function what are the four main parts of a keyboard and their function
list the parts of the nephron and describe the function of each part
Sun spots are colder than adjacent parts of the sun.
The basic parts of the sun are CORONA,SUNSPOT,and PROMINENCE.
what parts of leavs
The function describing earth's orbit round the sun is that for an ellipse.
part andv function of desktop publisher window
What is the function of each part of the lever
sun spots are cooler parts of the sun