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Sunspot

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sunspots
Sunspot
Sunspot numberstrack periods of sunspot activity.

Asunspotis an area of highmagneticactivity, on the surface of theSun.Sunspots produce bright light, but not as much as the surface around them, so they appear dark bycomparison.They are cooler than the rest of the sun. Some are small, and some are ten times bigger than Earth.

Asunspot cycleof eleven years has been found, with changes in activity. Every 11 years the number of sunspots increases, and later declines. Sunspots on one cycle are magnetically different from the next, so the total sunspot cycle is 22 years. This cycle has been seen since the 18th century. Before that time, for over a hundred years, there were very few sunspots. Astronomers do not know what caused this "Maunder Minimum".

Black and white drawing showing Latin script surrounding two concentric circles with two black dots inside the inner circle
A drawing of a sunspot in the Chronicles ofJohn of Worcester

Chineseastronomers said they could see sunspots. On 17 March 802 the monk Adelmus saw a big sunspot, which he could see for eight days. Adelmus thought that Mercury was going in front of the Sun and making a black spot.[1]When astronomers started using telescopes, most agreed that something was passing in front of the Sun.Galileo Galileiin 1612 guessed that there were actual spots on the Sun and that they showed that the Sun was turning.

The firstcyclicchanges of sunspots was seen by Heinrich Schwabe, and made Rudolf Wolf study them carefully, starting in 1848. Also in 1848, Joseph Henry showed a picture of the Sun and made sure that sunspots were cooler than the rest of the Sun (they are about 7000 degrees Fahrenheit, 4000 C). They are still very hot, but much cooler than the rest of the Sun's surface.

Effect on Earth

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Sunspots are cooler than the rest of the Sun. But many scientists think that when there are many sunspots, the Sun actually getshotter.Thisaffectstheweatherhere onEarth,and alsoradioreception. If this is true, then without sunspots, the Earth might become cooler. In the same way, if there were more sunspots, the Earth might become hotter, and there could be lessrain.This would make moredroughtson the Earth. Droughts are a long time with no rain. Without rain,cropsthat people eat would not grow. Scientists study sunspots and other solarphenomena,so they can know what they do to Earth. Thetemperatureof a sunspot is 4780°K. This is cold when compared to other areas on the surface of sun.[2]

References

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  1. Wilson, E.R."A Few Pre-Copernican Astronomers".Popular Astronomy.p. 93.
  2. "Sunspots Modern Research 3 of 7".RetrievedJanuary 9,2012.

Other websites

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