What's Inside the Sun? A Star Tour from the Inside Out
Our sun shapes every day of life on Earth and has for billions of years — but just because we're massively dependent on the star doesn't mean we know all its secrets.
And those mysteries have still-broader implications, because our sun is just the easiest to study of the trillions of stars surrounding us. After decades of diligent science work, we at least know what's inside the sun, even if we don't always understand how it works. Here's what's contained in that glowing ball of gas we circle every year of our lives.
Sun is mainly made up of hydrogen and helium gas and also with plasma.
Deep in the heart of our sun is its core, which is where the fusion reactions that power our star take place.
That means there's no adjective quite strong enough to describe just how hot and dense the core is, where temperatures reach over 27 million degrees Fahrenheit (15 million degrees Celsius) and material is packed together more than 10 times more densely than in lead.
After a photon leaves the sun's core, it moves outward to begin its long journey. According to NASA, any individual photon takes more than 100,000 years to travel from the core to the outer border of the radiative zone, because it bounces up and down rather than moving in a straight line.
The photosphere is the outermost visible layer of the sun, what we think of as the star's surface. This is where sunspots form and where the light that eventually reaches us on Earth comes from. Here, temperatures are relatively temperate, at about 10,000 degrees F (5,500 C)
The chromosphere is usually incredibly difficult to see, because it just leaves a reddish glow around the sun. But scientists think this unprepossessing layer may be crucial to conducting heat out of the sun and into the star's incredibly hot upper atmosphere.
The corona is the barely there outermost layer of the sun, which we can see only during a total solar eclipse, when the moon blocks out the brightness of the star's photosphere. That's made the corona remarkably difficult to study — but beginning later this year, NASA will fly a spacecraft directly though the corona to try to solve its lingering mysteries.
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SOLAR WIND
The solar wind isn't technically a layer of the sun, but the constant stream of highly charged particles flowing off the sun is one of the key ways our star affects planets. Here on Earth, our atmosphere mostly blankets us from the solar wind, but it's a key hazard for satellites and space travel. The solar wind also defines our solar system, which stretches as far as the wind does.
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