Corona, Chromosphere, Photosphere, Subsurface Flows, Internal Structure (convection zone, radiative zone, inner zone)
Energy is transformed between atoms in the radiative zone of the sun. In this layer, energy moves through the absorption and re-emission of photons by atoms. This process creates a gradient of temperature and density as energy is slowly transferred from the core to the surface of the sun.
Most of Earth's thermal energy is stored in the oceans. The top layer of the oceans absorbs and retains heat from the sun, while deeper layers circulate and distribute this heat energy around the globe through oceanic currents.
A boundary layer is a thin layer of fluid near a surface where the flow of the fluid is significantly affected by the presence of the surface. It develops due to the friction between the fluid and the surface, which slows down the flow of the fluid near the surface.
Sources of energy, such as sunlight, reach the troposphere through radiation. Energy from the sun passes through the Earth's atmosphere and is absorbed by the surface, which then heats up and warms the air in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the troposphere.
Greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and water vapor in the atmosphere absorb some of the energy from the sun, which contributes to the warming of the Earth's surface. These gases trap heat and radiate it back to the surface, creating the greenhouse effect.
The layer nearest to the sun's surface is the photosphere. It is visible during a solar eclipse as the sun's visible surface and is where most of the sun's energy is emitted as light and heat.
The layer in which the Earth receives the most energy is the photosphere
The dense layer of the sun that blocks energy and light is the photosphere. It is the visible surface of the sun and is where the sun's energy is emitted into space as light and heat.
The photosphere is the uppermost layer of the sun. It passes energy through this layer with a bubbling motion, carrying hotter, less dense material to the upper surface as the cooled, denser material sinks deeper into the surface.
The Earth's crust is the surface layer.
They do not have membranes. They are naked organelles
The zone of the sun where gases circulate is called the convection zone. In this layer, hot gases near the sun's core rise to the surface while cooler gases sink back down in a cycle, transferring heat towards the outer layers of the sun.
The photosphere is considered the sun's surface because it is the visible layer of the sun that emits light and heat into space. It is where most of the sun's energy is produced and is the layer that we see when we look at the sun.
The palisade layer is the leaf layer that contains the majority of chloroplasts. Its location near the upper surface of the leaf allows for efficient absorption of sunlight for photosynthesis. This layer plays a key role in capturing light energy and converting it into chemical energy.
The surface zone is the outer most layer in the ocean and is heated by the sun's energy. - A sixth grader answered this
The photosphere is the layer that is considered the sun's surface!
The Earth's surface layer is called the crust.