The Corona-sphere and the Photosphere
The outermost layer of the sun, corona, is visible during a total solar eclipse.
The layer of the sun that is only visible in an eclipse is called the corona.
An even fainter layer of the sun becomes visible.
No, the corona layer of the Sun is only visible during a total solar eclipse when the Moon blocks the bright sunlight. The corona is the outermost layer of the Sun's atmosphere, extending millions of kilometers into space and is best observed during a total solar eclipse when the Moon covers the Sun's surface, revealing the corona's faint, ethereal glow.
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 Corona-sphere and the Photosphere
The bright halo of the sun's atmosphere visible during a full eclipse is known as the solar corona. It consists of plasma released from the sun's outer layer and is only visible during a total solar eclipse when the moon completely blocks the sun's disk, revealing this outer layer. The corona appears as a shimmering halo of white light extending far beyond the sun's visible edge.
The layer nearest to the sun's surface is the photosphere. It is visible during a solar eclipse as the sun's visible surface and is where most of the sun's energy is emitted as light and heat.
The outer layer of the exosphere is known as the geocorona. It is a tenuous cloud of hydrogen gas that extends to thousands of kilometers above Earth's surface and is visible during certain astronomical phenomena like a solar eclipse.
It is called corona. It's the outermost layer of the sun
During an eclipse, the outer layer of the sun that you can see like a halo, is called the corona.
The solar corona, and solar prominences.