Duplicate Question
The question on this page has been marked as a duplicate question.
Original Question
Two astronomers are viewing temperature data from each of the sun's layers, but the layers aren't identified. Describe one way...Asked by rod wave
Two astronomers are viewing temperature data from each of the sun's layers, but the layers aren't identified. Describe one way the scientists can use temperature to identify which layer they are studying.(1 point)
Responses
The lowest temperatures are from the photosphere.
The lowest temperatures are from the photosphere.
The highest temperatures are from the radiative zone.
The highest temperatures are from the radiative zone.
The lowest temperatures are from the core.
The lowest temperatures are from the core.
The highest temperatures are from the corona.
Responses
The lowest temperatures are from the photosphere.
The lowest temperatures are from the photosphere.
The highest temperatures are from the radiative zone.
The highest temperatures are from the radiative zone.
The lowest temperatures are from the core.
The lowest temperatures are from the core.
The highest temperatures are from the corona.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The highest temperatures are from the corona.
This is a way the scientists can use temperature data to identify the layer they are observing, as the corona, which is the outermost layer of the sun's atmosphere, reaches temperatures around 1 to 3 million degrees Celsius, significantly hotter than the other layers.
This is a way the scientists can use temperature data to identify the layer they are observing, as the corona, which is the outermost layer of the sun's atmosphere, reaches temperatures around 1 to 3 million degrees Celsius, significantly hotter than the other layers.