during a full solar eclipse
The photosphere, the chromosphere, and the corona
The pink layer of the sun is the chromosphere. This layer is located above the photosphere and is characterized by a reddish-pink color during solar eclipses. The chromosphere is responsible for emitting the solar prominences and solar flares seen during solar events.
The bright red layer of the sun's surface containing hydrogen gas that can be seen is called the chromosphere. It lies just above the sun's visible surface, the photosphere, and is responsible for the red color seen during solar eclipses.
The photosphere comes first, followed by the chromosphere and then the corona. The photosphere is the Sun's visible surface, the chromosphere is the middle layer above the photosphere, and the corona is the outermost layer extending into space.
the chromosphere
spicules
The photosphere, the chromosphere, and the corona
The pink layer of the sun is the chromosphere. This layer is located above the photosphere and is characterized by a reddish-pink color during solar eclipses. The chromosphere is responsible for emitting the solar prominences and solar flares seen during solar events.
the chromosphere glows because of the release of hot, low density gases that are emitted from the sun. Normally, it can't be seen by the naked eye due to light from the photosphere blocking it. During a solar eclipse, the chromosphere is visible, appearing as a red ring around the Sun.
chromosphere
The bright red layer of the sun's surface containing hydrogen gas that can be seen is called the chromosphere. It lies just above the sun's visible surface, the photosphere, and is responsible for the red color seen during solar eclipses.
Chromosphere
During a solar eclipse, the layers of the sun that can be seen are the photosphere, chromosphere, and corona. The photosphere is the visible surface of the sun, the chromosphere is a reddish layer above the photosphere, and the corona is the outermost layer that appears as a faint halo around the sun.
The sun's atmosphere, or the chromosphere and the corona, can be seen with the unaided eye only during a total solar eclips.
The photosphere can be seen with visible-light telescopes, while the chromosphere is most easily observed with ultraviolet telescopes and the corona with X-ray telescopes.
The photosphere comes first, followed by the chromosphere and then the corona. The photosphere is the Sun's visible surface, the chromosphere is the middle layer above the photosphere, and the corona is the outermost layer extending into space.
the chromosphere glows because of the release of hot, low density gases that are emitted from the sun. Normally, it can't be seen by the naked eye due to light from the photosphere blocking it. During a solar eclipse, the chromosphere is visible, appearing as a red ring around the Sun.