Helium
the corona
The corona.
The gasses that make up the sun's corona.
The corona.
If there is a total lunar eclipse, everybody sees it as total. If there is a total solar eclipse, only people in a small part of Earth see it as total - most will see it as a partial eclipse, or not at all.
That would be the Sun's Corona.
The outermost layer of the sun is the corona. Only visible during eclipses, it is a low density cloud of plasma with higher transparency than the inner layers.
The last total solar eclipse visible in Pittsburgh occurred on August 21, 2017. During this event, the city experienced a partial eclipse, with about 80% of the sun obscured. The next total solar eclipse that will be visible from parts of the United States will occur on April 8, 2024, but Pittsburgh will only experience a partial eclipse then.
Technically, the statement is "True", but it is misleading. The statement implies that the corona is 'usually' visible, and is still visible during a solar eclipse. Actually, the corona is almost always drowned out by the glare of the sun, and is visible 'only' during a total solar eclipse, or with the disk somehow obscured with some astronomical research device.
no only in certain areas
The light seen around the sun during a total solar eclipse is the sun's outer atmosphere, known as the corona. The corona appears as a shimmering ring of light due to the sun's intense heat and magnetic fields. This phenomenon is only visible during a total solar eclipse when the moon completely covers the sun, revealing the sun's outer atmosphere.
Energy radiated from the surface of the sun visible during a solar eclipse appears in the form of the corona, which is the outer atmosphere of the sun. This is a faint, glowing halo of plasma that extends millions of kilometers into space and is only visible during a total solar eclipse when the moon blocks the brighter light from the sun's surface.