THE SUN IS THE STAR AT THE CENTRE OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM. It is about five billion years old and will continue to shine as it does now for about another five billion years. The Sun is a yellow main sequence star about 1.4 million kilometers in diameter. It consists almost entirely of hydrogen and helium.
In the Sun's core, hydrogen is converted to helium by nuclear fusion, releasing energy in the process. The energy travels from the core, through the radiative and convective zones, to the photosphere (visible surface), where it leaves the Sun in the form of heat and light. On the photosphere there are often dark, relatively cool areas called sunspots, which usually appears in the pairs or groups and are caused by the cooling effect of the magnetic field. Other types of solar activity are flares, which are usually associated with sunspots, and prominences. Flares are sudden discharges of high energy radiation and atomic particles. Prominences are huge loops or filament of gas extending into the solar atmosphere; some lusts for hours, others for months. Beyond the photosphere is the chromosphere (inner atmosphere) and the extremely ratified corona (outer atmosphere), which extends millions of kilometers into the space. Tiny particles that escape from the corona give rise to the solar wind , which streams through space at hundreds of kilometers per second. The chromosphere and corona can be seen from Earth when the Sun is totally eclipsed by the Moon.
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