Sunspot
The Arctic Circle runs across Alaska and Russia. The Arctic Circle is at 66 degrees 32 minutes N latitude and marks the point on the Earth's surface where the Sun does not appear above the horizon at the Winter Solstice. It also marks the southernmost point of the Arctic Frigid Zone.
Sunspots are areas that are cooler.
The sun came from saun but English call it sun
A star. The sun is a star. Latin - Sol
The name of the Egyptian god of the Sun is Ra. Eventually his name was replaced to Amun, the combination of Ra, the sun god, and Horus, the sky god.
The visible surface of the sun is called the photosphere. It emits light that we can see, and is where most of the sun's energy is radiated into space.
Yes I have seen a dark spot on the Sun. It is called a "Sunspot". It is formed on the Sun's surface which is called the "photo-sphere" and is caused by a loop of the Sun's magnetic field poking though the Sun's surface.
solar flares
The sun provides the light seen on the moon, because the sun's rays hits the moon's surface
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 name of the sun's surface layer is called the chromosphere. The other layers of the sun is called photosphere and convection zone.
I think this refers to "granulation".
Dark marks on the sun are known as sunspots. They are areas of cooler temperature on the sun's surface caused by strong magnetic activity. Sunspots can vary in size and shape and play a role in the sun's 11-year solar cycle.
The ecliptic.
No, the moon's surface is too reflective when the light is shining, and therefore the sun's light reflected from the moon's surface blocks any stars from being visible from the surface of the moon by either eye or camera.
The layer of the Sun's atmosphere that can normally be seen is the photosphere. This is the visible surface of the Sun that emits light and heat and is responsible for the majority of the sunlight we receive on Earth.
The Antarctic Circle is at 66 degrees 32 minutes S latitude and marks the point on the Earth's surface where the Sun does not appear above the horizon at the Winter Solstice. It also marks the northernmost point of the Antarctic Frigid Zone.