When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Photosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosphere

    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.

  3. Chromosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromosphere

    The red color of the chromosphere could be seen during the solar eclipse of August 11, 1999.. The density of the Sun's chromosphere decreases exponentially with distance from the center of the Sun by a factor of roughly 10 million, from about 2 × 10 −4 kg/m 3 at the chromosphere's inner boundary to under 1.6 × 10 −11 kg/m 3 at the outer boundary. [7]

  4. Stellar atmosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_atmosphere

    The photosphere, which is the atmosphere's lowest and coolest layer, is normally its only visible part. [1] Light escaping from the surface of the star stems from this region and passes through the higher layers. The Sun's photosphere has a temperature in the 5,770–5,780 K (5,500–5,510 °C; 9,930–9,940 °F) range.

  5. Atmosphere of Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere_of_Earth

    The stratosphere is the second-lowest layer of Earth's atmosphere. It lies above the troposphere and is separated from it by the tropopause. This layer extends from the top of the troposphere at roughly 12 km (7.5 mi; 39,000 ft) above Earth's surface to the stratopause at an altitude of about 50 to 55 km (31 to 34 mi; 164,000 to 180,000 ft).

  6. Sun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun

    The spectrum of sunlight has approximately the spectrum of a black-body radiating at 5,772 K (9,930 °F), [12] interspersed with atomic absorption lines from the tenuous layers above the photosphere. The photosphere has a particle density of ~10 23 m −3 (about 0.37% of the particle number per volume of Earth's atmosphere at sea level). The ...

  7. Atmosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere

    A stellar atmosphere is the outer region of a star, which includes the layers above the opaque photosphere; stars of low temperature might have outer atmospheres containing compound molecules. The atmosphere of Earth is composed of nitrogen (78%), oxygen (21%), argon (0.9%), carbon dioxide (0.04%) and trace gases. [2]

  8. This bizarre river in Colombia is called 'Liquid Rainbow'

    www.aol.com/news/2016-07-02-this-bizarre-river...

    There is a river in Colombia that has been called the "liquid rainbow" and the "river of five colors" for good reason, notes News.com.au.. The 62-mile-long Caño Cristales near the town of La ...

  9. Expanding photosphere method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expanding_photosphere_method

    The expanding photosphere method (EPM) is a method used to measure distances to Type II supernovae. It was developed by Robert Kirshner and John Kwan in 1974, based on the Baade–Wesselink method (1926). [1] [2] EPM is a geometrical method that compares a supernova's angular size to its physical size determined from spectroscopic measurements. [3]