| Themes > Science > Astronomy > The Solar System > The Sun > The Photosphere of the Sun | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Sun is a ball of gas, so it does not have a well-defined surface. When we speak of the surface of the Sun, we normally mean the photosphere. Definition of the PhotosphereAs we look down into the atmosphere at the surface of the Sun the view becomes more and more opaque. The point where it appears to become completely opaque is called the photosphere. Thus, the photosphere may be thought of as the imaginary surface from which the solar light that we see appears to be emitted. The diameter quoted for the Sun usually refers to the diameter of the photosphere.Properties of the PhotosphereThe adjacent table shows some properties of the photosphere. This table indicates that the solar atmosphere changes from being almost completely transparent to being almost opaque over a distance of about 400 km. Notice also that in this region the temperature drops rapidly as we near the surface, and that the pressure (measured in bars, where one bar is the average atmospheric pressure at the surface of the Earth) is very low - generally 1% or less of Earth surface atmospheric pressure.Some Images of the Solar SurfaceThe following links provide current images of the solar surface.
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