They appear in the Photosphere. That's basically the "surface" of the Sun.
Sunspots are the temporary dark spots on the surface of the sun, specifically the photosphere. Sunspots can get as big as 50,000 km long. Sunspots can interrupt terrestrial magnetism.
Sunspots are areas on the sun's surface with strong magnetic fields. They occur when the magnetic field lines break through the sun's surface, inhibiting the normal convection process and causing the area to appear darker and cooler. The number of sunspots on the sun varies in an 11-year solar cycle.
I believe that the layer in which sun spots occur would be the chromosphere. The chromosphere is the second layer in the sun's atmosphere and is about 2,000km above the photosphere(the first layer).
Sunspots are caused by interactions between the Sun's magnetic field and its plasma. Magnetic field lines become twisted and concentrated, inhibiting the flow of energy from within the Sun, resulting in cooler and darker regions on the surface known as sunspots. These sunspots appear darker because they are cooler compared to the surrounding areas.
They appear in the Photosphere. That's basically the "surface" of the Sun.
I assume you are talking about sunspots, as they are, in effect, "storms on the sun". They occur on or near the sun's surface.
Sunspots are the temporary dark spots on the surface of the sun, specifically the photosphere. Sunspots can get as big as 50,000 km long. Sunspots can interrupt terrestrial magnetism.
Sunspots are areas on the sun's surface with strong magnetic fields. They occur when the magnetic field lines break through the sun's surface, inhibiting the normal convection process and causing the area to appear darker and cooler. The number of sunspots on the sun varies in an 11-year solar cycle.
Sun spots and prominences.
Sunspots are the coolest areas on the surface of the sun
I believe that the layer in which sun spots occur would be the chromosphere. The chromosphere is the second layer in the sun's atmosphere and is about 2,000km above the photosphere(the first layer).
Sunspots are caused by interactions between the Sun's magnetic field and its plasma. Magnetic field lines become twisted and concentrated, inhibiting the flow of energy from within the Sun, resulting in cooler and darker regions on the surface known as sunspots. These sunspots appear darker because they are cooler compared to the surrounding areas.
No. Sunspots form in the surface layer of the sun called the photosphere.
Sunspots are the temporary dark spots on the surface of the sun, specifically the photosphere. Sunspots can get as big as 50,000 km long. Sunspots can interrupt terrestrial magnetism.
Sunspots are actually cooler regions on the sun's surface compared to their surroundings. They appear darker because they are areas of intense magnetic activity that disrupts the normal flow of heat to the surface.
Sunspots