3. Sunspot and granulation
This high resolution
image shows a close-up view of a moderately large sunspot. The
field of view covers about
60000 km horizontally, and 38000 km vertically. The penumbral diameter
of this sunspot is about 16500 km; the Earth, with an equatorial
radius of 6378 km, would cover up the umbra but not the penumbra.
Sunspots can be quite small (1500 km diameter), and
reach sizes up to 50000 km. While it is known that
the darker appearance of the umbra and penumbra is due to their
lower temperatures, the sharpness of
the boundaries between the umbra and penumbra,
and between the penumbra and photosphere, is a phenomenon that is not
yet properly understood. While sunspots, especially large ones, can
be fairly long-lived (their lifetimes
being measured in weeks and months), they
do eventually disappear, often by successive fragmentation into
smaller and smaller sunspots. Likewise, sunspots do not suddenly appear
fully grown, but usually show up as small structures, irregularly
shaped and usually without a penumbra (darker structures without
penumbra are usually referred to as pores),
and grow within days or sometimes weeks to their full size.
Another striking feature on this image is the cellular pattern
so clearly visible outside of pores and sunspots on this photograph,
with brighter regions surrounded by narrow, darker boundaries.
This pattern is called granulation, and is
associated with large scale fluid motions at and just below the
photosphere;
the brighter, central regions correspond to rising hotter fluid,
and the darker, narrow lanes to sinking, colder fluid. Typical
speeds in granular flows are of the order of a few kilometers per second.