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corona |
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corona![]() The structure of the Sun. Nuclear reactions at the core release vast amounts of energy in the form of light and heat that radiate out to the photosphere and corona. Surges of glowing gas rise as prominences from the surface of the Sun and cooler areas, known as sunspots, appear as dark patches on the star's surface. Faint halo of hot (about 2,000,000°C/3,600,000°F) and tenuous gas around the Sun, which boils from the surface. It is visible at solar eclipses or through a coronagraph, an instrument that blocks light from the Sun's brilliant disc. Gas flows away from the corona to form the solar wind. It is not certain why the corona is so much hotter than the surface of the Sun (about 6,700°C/12,100°F). The heating may be due to interactions with the Sun's magnetic field, or to pulses of sound waves from the Sun. NASA's Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager mission, launched in 2001, studies the evolution of energy in the corona. corona
Corona
Corona
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NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory then pinpointed the location of the source, which lies in the stellar nursery R Coronae Australis. Secundum ius altum & praecipuum sacrae coronae Franciae divinum est insigne, scilicet, arma regalia trium liliorum Clodoveo Regi a coelo demissa, trium buffonum seu ranarum silvestrium, quibus prius pro nobilitatis insigni utebatur, loco; & ut aliqui asserunt, potuit esse ratio: q. The object orbiting Rho Coronae Borealis is hardly the first to be discovered circling another star - depending on how you count, it's somewhere in the ninth to 13th range. |
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