It is called a "prominence".
Sunspots are areas of gas on the sun that are cooler than the gases around them.
As strange as it is to think of a body as hot as the sun having such a thing as a "cool" spot, it actually does! These areas are known as sunspots. Their number changes from year to year and they appear darker in color when studied by astronomers.
solar flares
Solar Flares (Study Island)
These loops are called penumbral fibrils. They are structures of hot gas in the sun's photosphere that connect different parts of sunspots, contributing to the magnetic activity and energy transfer within those regions.
Sunspots are regions of cooler gas; however, they are still extremely hot.
Sunspots.
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Prominerces
prominence
Sunspots are areas of gas on the sun that are cooler than the gases around them.
As strange as it is to think of a body as hot as the sun having such a thing as a "cool" spot, it actually does! These areas are known as sunspots. Their number changes from year to year and they appear darker in color when studied by astronomers.
solar flares
Unleaded gas is petrol. In some countries they call it petrol and in others it is called gasoline or gas.
The reddish gas that is often associated with sunspots is called hydrogen. Sunspots are cooler areas on the Sun's surface that appear darker and are associated with magnetic activity. When observing the Sun, especially during solar flares or prominences, hydrogen can emit a reddish light, particularly in the H-alpha wavelength, which is part of the visible spectrum. This emission is indicative of the complex interactions occurring in the Sun's atmosphere.
Slower convection means that less gas is transferring heat from the core of the sun to the photosphere.
It has to be solar flares, supra-sunspots, solar wind, or prominences.