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23 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

chromosphere

The lower part of the Sun's outer atmosphere that lies directly above the Sun's visible surface (photosphere).

convection zone

The region immediately below the Sun's visible surface in which its heat is carried by convection.

corona

The outer, hottest part of the Sun's atmosphere.

coronal hole

A low-density region in the Sun's corona. The solar wind may originate in these regions.

cosmic rays

Extremely energetic particles (protons, electrons, and so forth) traveling at nearly the speed of light. Some rays are emitted by the Sun, but most come from more-distance sources, perhaps exploding supernovas.

granulation

Texture seen in the Sun's photosphere and is created by clumps of hot gas that rise to the Sun's surface.

hydrostatic equilibrium

The condition in which pressure and gravitational forces in a star or planet are in balance. Without such balance, bodies will either collapse or expand.

Maunder minimum

The time period, from about A.D. 1600 to 1740, during which the Sun was relatively inactive. Few sunspots were observed during this period.

neutrino

Tiny neutral particles with little or no mass and immense penetrating power. These particles are produced in great numbers by the Sun and other stars as they fuse hydrogen into helium, and also by supernova explosions.

nuclear fusion

The binding of two light nuclei to form a heavier nucleus, with some nuclear mass converted to energy. For example, the fusion of hydrogen into helium. This process supplies the energy of most stars and is commonly called "burning" by astronomers.

perfect gas law (ideal gas law)

A law relating the pressure, density, and temperature of a gas. It states that the pressure is proportional to the density times the temperature.

photosphere

The visible surface of the Sun that we can see when we look at the Sun in the sky.

pressure

The force exerted by a substance such as a gas on an area divided by that area.

prominences

A cloud of hot gas in the Sun's outer atmosphere. This cloud is often shaped like an arch, supported by the Sun's magnetic field.

proton-proton chain

The nuclear fusion process that converts hydrogen into helium in stars like the Sun and thereby generates their energy. This is the dominant energy-generation mechanism in cool, low-mass stars.

radiative zone

The region inside a star where its energy is carried outward by radiation.

solar cycle

The cyclic change in solar activity, such as sunspots and solar flares, rising and declining about every 11 years.

solar flare

A sudden increase in brightness of a small region on the Sun that is caused by a magnetic disturbance.

solar wind

The outflow of low-density, hot gas from the Sun's upper atmosphere. It is partially this wind that creates the tail of a comet, by blowing gas away from the comet's immediate surroundings.

spicule

A hot, thin column of gas in the Sun's chromosphere.

strong force

The force that holds protons and neutrons together in the atomic nucleus. Sometimes called the nuclear force.

sunspot

A dark, cooler region on the Sun's visible surface created by intense magnetic fields.

Zeeman effect

The splitting of a single spectrum line into two or three lines by a magnetic field. A method for detecting magnetic fields in objects from their spectra.