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Photosphere

Star's outer shell from which light is radiated

Photosphere

Star's outer shell from which light is radiated

A miasma of plasma
Sun's surface in false color

The photosphere is a star's outer shell from which light is radiated. It extends into a star's surface until the plasma becomes opaque, equivalent to an optical depth of approximately ,{{cite book | name-list-style=amp

A photosphere is the region of a luminous object, usually a star, that is transparent to photons of certain wavelengths.

Stars, except neutron stars, have no solid or liquid surface. Therefore, the photosphere is typically used to describe the Sun's or another star's visual surface.

Etymology

The term photosphere is derived from Ancient Greek roots, φῶς, φωτός/phos, photos meaning "light" and σφαῖρα/sphaira meaning "sphere", in reference to it being a spherical surface that is perceived to emit light.

Temperature

The surface of a star is defined to have a temperature given by the effective temperature in the Stefan–Boltzmann law. Various stars have photospheres of various temperatures.

Composition of the Sun

The Sun is composed primarily of the chemical elements hydrogen and helium; they account for 74.9% and 23.8%, respectively, of the mass of the Sun in the photosphere. All heavier elements, colloquially called metals in stellar astronomy, account for less than 2% of the mass, with oxygen (roughly 1% of the Sun's mass), carbon (0.3%), neon (0.2%), and iron (0.2%) being the most abundant.

Sun's photosphere

The Sun's photosphere has a temperature between 4400 and (with an effective temperature of 5772 K) meaning human eyes perceive it as an overwhelmingly bright surface, and with a sufficiently strong neutral density filter, as a hueless, gray surface. It has a density of about 3 kg/m3; increasing with increasing depth. The Sun's photosphere is 100–400 kilometers thick.

Photospheric phenomena

In the Sun's photosphere, the most ubiquitous phenomenon are granules—convection cells of plasma each approximately 1000 km in diameter with hot rising plasma in the center and cooler plasma falling in the spaces between them, flowing at velocities of 7 km/s. Each granule has a lifespan of only about twenty minutes, resulting in a continually shifting "boiling" pattern. Grouping the typical granules are supergranules up to 30,000 km in diameter with lifespans of up to 24 hours and flow speeds of about 500 m/s, carrying magnetic field bundles to the edges of the cells. Other magnetically related phenomena in the Sun's photosphere include sunspots and solar faculae dispersed between granules. These features are too fine to be directly observed on other stars; however, sunspots have been indirectly observed, in which case they are referred to as starspots.

Notes

References

References

  1. (2005). "Whole Earth Telescope observations of BPM 37093: A seismological test of crystallization theory in white dwarfs". Astronomy & Astrophysics.
  2. (2003). "Nature of Fault Planes in Solid Neutron Star Matter". The Astrophysical Journal.
  3. (2004). "Heterogeneity of solid neutron-star matter: Transport coefficients and neutrino emissivity". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
  4. "Sun Fact Sheet".
  5. (2014). "Resolution B3 on recommended nominal conversion constants for selected solar and planetary properties".
  6. Stanford Solar Center. (2008). "The Sun's Vital Statistics".
  7. John A. Eddy. (1979). "SP-402 A New Sun: The Solar Results From Skylab". NASA.
  8. "Search for Origins".
  9. "The Photosphere".
  10. "Layers of the Sun".
  11. "NASA/Marshall Solar Physics". [[NASA]].
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