Sunspots typically form over the course of several days to weeks and can last for days to months before they disappear. The exact duration can vary based on the size and complexity of the sunspot.
Sunspots can last for days to weeks, with an average lifetime of about two weeks. As the sunspot fades, its magnetic field weakens and it eventually becomes indistinguishable from the surrounding surface of the Sun.
Probably so, and it still does today. We don't know the reason for the connection, but the weather is typically colder during times when the sunspot number is low for long periods. There have been two multi-decade long periods of very low sunspot activity, the Maunder Minimum and the Dalton Minimum. Each is associated with extended periods of unusually cold weather.
We do not yet have a good understanding of the way that sunspot activity changes. We've only been keeping track of sunspots since the early 1600s. In general, sunspot activity increases and decreases in a cycle that is approximately 11 years long. But the cycle isn't particularly stable; for example, the previous cycle, Solar Cycle 23, lasted for closer to 13 years and the current Solar Cycle 24 has been fairly low in activity. This may have long-term significance in our weather here on Earth; twice in the last 4 centuries, we've seen extended periods of very low sunspot activity, and both periods have been associated with unusually cold weather. Some scientists fear that the current sunspot deficit may be a prelude to a new period of cooler-than-normal weather.
You can magically make long items appear or disappear while holding your thumb upwards and palm facing you by swiftly placing and pulling them behind your hear.
The long form for "asstd" is "assorted."
Blood vessels do not normally disappear. Toes need blood too. Why should a blood vessel in a toe disappear?
Sunspots can last for days to weeks, with an average lifetime of about two weeks. As the sunspot fades, its magnetic field weakens and it eventually becomes indistinguishable from the surrounding surface of the Sun.
25 d 9 h 7 min 13 s, to do a full rotation, from east (when disappear of view) to west when is visible from earth again is about 2 weeks (aprox) (if sunspot is small it probably disappear in that time)
11 years in average.
Individual sunspots can appear and disappear in a single day, or even in just a few hours. On the other hand, some sunspots that disappear as the Sun spins will re-appear 15 days later when the spot becomes visible again. The "sunspot cycle" is typically about 11 years long from peak to peak, but the pattern isn't especially constant. Some cycles take as little as 8 to 9 years, while some stretch out for 15-17 years.
Sunspot 'cycles' are at approximately 11-year intervals.
The average length of the sunspot cycle is 11 years. Some cycles are double peaked, which makes it difficult to determine when one ends and when another one begins.
Whoever suspends you normally gets to choose.
6.25days 2hours 1minute 3seconds
Aluminum does not disappear naturally. It is a naturally occurring element and can be recycled indefinitely without breaking down. However, if aluminum is discarded as waste, it can persist in the environment for hundreds to thousands of years, depending on its form and the conditions in which it is exposed.
It can be. Normally long is an adjective (a long walk, a long time) but it can act as its own adverb form in uses such as "Have you waited long?" (i.e. for a long time) or idiomatic uses such as "all night long."
1000 years