Physics, asked by redpanda20, 1 month ago

Which is the outermost layer of the Sun and Earth?​

Answers

Answered by XxMissPsychoxX
7

The Sun, as shown by the illustration to the left, can be divided into six layers. From the center out, the layers of the Sun are as follows:

the solar interior composed of the core (which occupies the innermost quarter or so of the Sun’s radius),

the radiative zone,

and the convective zone,

then there is the visible surface known as the photosphere,

the chromosphere,

and finally the outermost layer, the corona.

Hope it helps you mr panda

Answered by XxZEHRILIBANDIxX
2

Answer:

The Sun, as shown by the illustration to the left, can be divided into six layers. From the center out, the layers of the Sun are as follows:

the solar interior composed of the core (which occupies the innermost quarter or so of the Sun’s radius),

the radiative zone,

and the convective zone,

then there is the visible surface known as the photosphere,

the chromosphere,

and finally the outermost layer, the corona.

The energy produced through fusion in the Sun’s core powers the Sun and produces all of the heat and light that we receive here on Earth. The process by which energy escapes from the Sun is very complex. Since we can’t see inside the Sun, most of what astronomers know about this subject comes from combining theoretical models of the Sun’s interior with observational facts such as the Sun’s mass, surface temperature, and luminosity (total amount of energy output from the surface).

All of the energy that we detect as light and heat originates from nuclear reactions deep inside the Sun’s high-temperature “core.” This core extends about one-quarter of the way from the center of Sun (where the temperature is around 15.7 million kelvin (K), or 28 million degrees Fahrenheit) to its surface, which is only 5778 K “cool

Hope its helpful fo uh dada ji ♡⁺◟(●˙▾˙●)◞⁺♡

How are uh ?

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