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Space^15


At the centre of the Solar System is the Sun, a vast


globe of glowing gas that pours energy into space as


light and heat. From Earth, it looks the same size as the


Moon, which covers it during a. SOLAR ECLIPSE.


WHAT IS THE SURFACE OF THE SUN LIKE?


The surface of the Sun heaves and boils as pockets of hot gas well up and


sink back down. This gives the surface a grainy look, which is known as


granulation. Violent explosions called solar flares rip through the surface,


and giant fountain-like eruptions called prominences shoot superhot


gas far into space. Darker areas called sunspots often appear. They


are about 1,500°C (2,700°F) cooler than the gas around them.


A solar eclipse happens when the Moon passes


between the Earth and the Sun. It is a partial


eclipse if the Moon only covers part of the


Sun, and a total eclipse if the Sun is covered


completely. Two to five solar eclipses can be


seen from somewhere on Earth each year.


WHAT HAPPENS DURING A TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE?


When the Sun is completely covered, day suddenly turns


into night, the air chills, and birds start to roost. Totality (the


period of darkness) can last up to 7½ minutes, but is usually


much shorter. During totality, the pink inner atmosphere of


the Sun, the chromosphere, shows up. The pearly white outer


atmosphere, the corona, is also visible, and prominences can


sometimes be seen around the Moon’s dark edge.


WHAT IS THE SUN MADE OF?


The Sun is made up mainly of hydrogen (about 73 per cent) and helium (about


25 per cent). There are also traces of around 60 other elements (about 2 per cent).


Hydrogen is the fuel in the nuclear reactions that produce the Sun’s energy.


Diameter (distance across) 1.4 million km (865,000 miles)
Average distance from Earth 150 million km (93 million miles)
Time to spin around own axis 25.4 days (at Equator)
Mass 330,000 x Earth’s mass
Density 1.4 x density of water
Average surface temperature 5,500°C (9,900°F)
Core temperature 15 million°C (27 million°F)
Age 4,600 million years

1 MAGNETIC LOOPS
Magnetized loops of gas at a
million°C (1.8 million°F) arch for
thousands of kilometres above
the Sun’s visible surface.


INSIDE THE SUN 3
Nuclear reactions produce
the Sun’s energy in the central
core, where temperatures reach
15 million°C (27 million°F).
The energy is carried to the
surface first by radiation,
then by convection.

1 ECLIPSE SEQUENCE
The whole of a total solar eclipse takes about two hours. Light fades
dramatically in the last few minutes before the Moon covers the Sun.
During totality, when the Sun is completely covered, its faint outer
atmosphere shows up as a white haze around the Moon’s disc.

FIND OUT MORE. Heat 168–169 • Moon 17 • Nuclear Energy 167 • Stars 24–


SOLAR ECLIPSES


SUN


Sun


Prominence, a huge
fountain of hot gas
leaping thousands of
kilometres above
the Sun’s surface

Radiative zone, where
energy from the core
travels outwards
by radiation

Core, where massive
nuclear reactions
create enormous
amounts of energy

Convective zone, where
rising currents of hot gas
carry energy to the surface

SUN DATA

Solar flare,
a violent
explosion on
the surface

Sun
uncovered more
and more as
Moon moves on

Moon
covers up more
and more of Sun Totality

Sun

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