At Westonci.ca, we make it easy to get the answers you need from a community of informed and experienced contributors. Our Q&A platform provides quick and trustworthy answers to your questions from experienced professionals in different areas of expertise. Connect with a community of professionals ready to provide precise solutions to your questions quickly and accurately.

Describe what the sun would look like from earth if the entire photosphere were the same temperature as a sunspot?

Sagot :

The sun would look like from earth if the entire photosphere were the same temperature as a sunspot then wouldn't see anything from Earth but darkness

The lowest layer of the sun is the photosphere. It is the outer layer of the sun. It is the deepest region of the luminous object. It is composed of convection cells which are called granules . The Sun's photosphere has a temperature between 4,500 and 6,000 K

Sunspots are areas where the magnetic field is about 2,500 times stronger than Earth's, much higher than anywhere else on the Sun.  Because of the strong magnetic field, the magnetic pressure increases while the surrounding atmospheric pressure decreases.

Sunspots tend to occur in pairs that have magnetic fields pointing in opposite directions.  A typical spot consists of a dark region called the umbra, surrounded by a lighter region known as the penumbra.  

The sunspots appear relatively dark because the surrounding surface of the Sun (the photosphere) is about 10,000 degrees F, while the umbra is about 6,300 degrees F.  Sunspots are quite large as an average size is about the same size as the Earth.

If the photosphere were of the same temperature as the sunspot, then we wouldn't see anything from Earth but darkness. We were only able to see and recognize the sunspot because it is surrounded by the visible photosphere.

To learn more about photosphere here

https://brainly.com/question/3598352

#SPJ4