A solar prominence
Solar prominences
Solar prominences
No. A sunspot is a slightly cooler area of the surface associated with magnetic disturbances within the Sun. The eruptions of gas are called prominences, and they are related to the phenomenon called solar flares.
Solar Prominence: The part of the sun that erupts and shoots out for thousands of kilometers and back again forming ribbon shaped clouds. Solar Flare: The part of the sun that erupts and shoots out from the surface of the sun for thousands of kilometers.
Ozone
An arched eruption of gas from the sun's surface is called a solar prominence. These immense looping structures of cooler, denser plasma can extend thousands of miles into space and are typically caused by the sun's magnetic field. Solar prominences are easily seen during solar eclipses, highlighting the sun's dynamic and active nature.
Our sun is a star. A start does not have a solid surface, but is a ball of gas.
Solar flares. The loops of plasma are related to strong magnetic fields within the Sun. See the related link for more information.
its gas
its gas
Solar prominences
Solar prominences
Solar prominences
no there can not because the sun is a ball of gas just like any other star
The Sun does not have a surface as we know it, but a photosphere which is the visible surface of the Sun.
Granules are small convective cells on the Sun's surface caused by rising hot gas and sinking cool gas. Spicules are small jets of gas that shoot upward from the Sun's surface. Together, these features create the granulated texture seen on the Sun's surface.
No. There is nothing solid in the sun. It consists entirely of superheated gas.