Sunspots are darker because they are cooler than the surrounding area.
Sunspots are darker than the surrounding areas, because they are colder - about 1200 kelvin less - than the surrounding areas.
A sunspot is a part of the Sun that is cooler, and therefore darker, than the surroundings.
sunspots
Sunspots appear darker because they are "cooler" than the surrounding area.
A sunspot is an area on the Sun's surface (the photosphere) that is affected by intense magnetic activity, which inhibits convection, thus reducing the surface temperature in that region. Even though sunspots are still very bright and hot they appear darker because they are cooler than the surrounding area. The normal temperature of the photosphere is about 5,800 kelvin, whereas the temperature of a sunspot is roughly 4,000 - 4,500 kelvin, which leaves them clearly visible (through filters) as dark spots. The average sunspot is about the size of the Earth! However, sunspots come in a variety of sizes ranging from hundreds to tens of thousands of miles across (many times larger than Earth). Scientists measure the total size (area) of all of the sunspots seen on the sun every day to get a measure of how active the sun is. Sunspots are not permanent. They appear and disappear on the surface of the sun in regular cycles that average about 11 years.See the link below for more information
Lighter than day darker than night is an idiom that is usually used to describe the moon.
They are colder and darker than the other areas
A sunspot is a part of the Sun that is cooler, and therefore darker, than the surroundings.
In the sea, where the water is darker than the surrounding areas.
Sunspots aren't actually dark, if you could look just at a sunspot it would still be bright enough to damage your eyes. They are however, significantly darker than the surrounding Sun, which makes them appear black. Sunspots are darker than the surrounding Sun because they are cooler areas. What happens is a "tangle" of magnetic field stops the convection bringing new hot plasma to the surface, meaning the area inside the tangle keeps cooling, we can't see magnetic field lines, so what we see is the cooler region of plasma.
sunspot
They are darker because they are relatively cooler than the surrounding area. They are cooler because where a sunspot happens tightly bunched together magnetic field lines poke out of the surface of the Sun. This region of intense magnetic activity, inhibits convection motion and thus less heat is welling up from the Sun's interior.
It is called a sunspot.
A sunspot is a dark spot on the sun's surface. It is darker because it is cooler than most parts on the sun.
No part of the sun is black. There are anomalies called sunspots which are cooler than the surrounding areas that appear darker but they are still incredibly hot and are not black.
No, sunspots are darker but they are a couple degrees cooler, not warmer
This is because they are cooler.
sunspots