The bright red layer on the surface of the sun is known as the chromosphere. It is composed mainly of hydrogen gas and emits light at various wavelengths, giving it a reddish hue. The chromosphere is located above the sun's visible surface, the photosphere, and is significant in solar dynamics and phenomena.
The bright red layer of the sun's surface containing hydrogen gas that can be seen is called the chromosphere. It lies just above the sun's visible surface, the photosphere, and is responsible for the red color seen during solar eclipses.
Jupiter is a gas giant composed mainly of hydrogen and helium with no solid surface. It is theorized to have a core made of rock and metal, surrounded by a layer of metallic hydrogen, and an outer layer of molecular hydrogen. While water is present in the form of ice in its moons, such as Europa, Jupiter itself does not have a discernible surface where liquid water can exist.
Prominences occur in the chromosphere layer of the sun's atmosphere. They are large, bright, gaseous features that extend outward from the sun's surface.
Jupiter doesn't have a solid land surface like Earth. It is a gas giant composed mainly of hydrogen and helium. Its "surface" is a layer of dense gas and liquid metallic hydrogen.
The surface of the sun is known as the photosphere, which appears as a bright, granular layer due to the convective motion of hot gases. It is where the sun's energy is released in the form of light and heat, making it the visible layer of the sun.
The bright red layer of the sun's surface containing hydrogen gas that can be seen is called the chromosphere. It lies just above the sun's visible surface, the photosphere, and is responsible for the red color seen during solar eclipses.
Photosphere- outer (gaseous) layer or surface of sun that we see Faculae- bright areas Sunspots- dark areas
Jupiter is a gas giant composed mainly of hydrogen and helium with no solid surface. It is theorized to have a core made of rock and metal, surrounded by a layer of metallic hydrogen, and an outer layer of molecular hydrogen. While water is present in the form of ice in its moons, such as Europa, Jupiter itself does not have a discernible surface where liquid water can exist.
Prominences occur in the chromosphere layer of the sun's atmosphere. They are large, bright, gaseous features that extend outward from the sun's surface.
the palisade layer.
Jupiter has a core made of rock and metal at its center, surrounded by a layer of metallic hydrogen. Above this is a layer of liquid metallic hydrogen, followed by a layer of molecular hydrogen. The outermost layer consists of clouds of ammonia and water vapor.
The ozone layer is found in the stratosphere, a layer of Earth's atmosphere located 10 to 50 kilometers above the Earth's surface.
A clean aluminum surface reacts very rapidly with oxygen, but the surface is quickly covered with a surface passivating layer containing aluminum and oxygen that prevents further rapid reaction.
Photosphere- outer (gaseous) layer or surface of sun that we see Faculae- bright areas Sunspots- dark areas
The troposphere is Earth's densest atmospheric layer, containing approximately 75% of the atmosphere's total mass. It is the layer closest to the Earth's surface, extending up to about 7-17 kilometers in altitude.
Carbon dioxide in the air can react with zinc metal to form zinc carbonate. This reaction occurs over time as the zinc surface is exposed to air containing carbon dioxide, leading to the formation of a white powdery layer of zinc carbonate on the surface of the metal.
The Earth's crust is the surface layer.