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The chromosphere is above the photosphere. Solar energy passes
through this region on its way out from the center of the
Sun. Faculae and flares arise in the chromosphere. Faculae
are bright luminous hydrogen clouds which form above regions
where sunspots are about to form. Flares are bright filaments
of hot gas emerging from sunspot regions. Sunspots are dark
depressions on the photosphere with a typical temperature
of 4,000°C (7,000°F).
The corona is the outer part of the Sun's
atmosphere. It is in this region that prominences appears.
Prominences are immense clouds of glowing gas that erupt from
the upper chromosphere.
The outer region of the corona stretches far
into space and consists of particles traveling slowly away
from the Sun. The corona can only be seen during total solar
eclipses. (See Solar Eclipse Image).
The Sun appears to have been active for 4.6
billion years and has enough fuel to go on for another five
billion years or so. At the end of its life, the Sun will
start to fuse helium into heavier elements and begin to swell
up, ultimately growing so large that it will swallow the Earth.
After a billion years as a red giant, it will suddenly collapse
into a white dwarf -- the final end product of a star like
ours. It may take a trillion years to cool off completely.
|
| Sun
Statistics |
| Mass
(kg) |
1.989e+30 |
| Mass
(Earth = 1) |
332,830 |
| Equatorial
radius (km) |
695,000 |
| Equatorial
radius (Earth = 1) |
108.97 |
| Mean
density (gm/cm^3) |
1.410 |
| Rotational
period (days) |
25-36* |
| Escape
velocity (km/sec) |
618.02 |
| Luminosity
(ergs/sec) |
3.827e33 |
| Magnitude
(Vo) |
-26.8 |
| Mean
surface temperature |
6,000°C |
| Age
(billion years) |
4.5 |
| Principal
chemistry
Hydrogen
Helium
Oxygen
Carbon
Nitrogen
Neon
Iron
Silicon
Magnesium
Sulfur
All others
|
92.1%
7.8%
0.061%
0.030%
0.0084%
0.0076%
0.0037%
0.0031%
0.0024%
0.0015%
0.0015% |
|