Detailed information about the changing surface of the sun has emerged. Images released by the Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope on the island of Hawaii reveal objects as small as 30 kilometers across the Sun's surface. Compared to the size of the Sun, which is nearly 1.4 million km in diameter and 149 million km from Earth, 30 km is a paltry size.
The cell-shaped parts seen now are almost the size of the state of Texas in the United States. These particles are a collection of hot, turbulent gases or plasma. The bright center is where the sun's material is boiling, and the dark channels around it are where the plasma is frozen and submerged.
The Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope is located atop the 3,000-meter summit of Haleakala Volcano on the island of Maui in Hawaii. At 4 meters in diameter, the primary imaging mirror is the world's largest for a solar telescope. We will use that observatory to study the movements of the sun. Scientists want to learn more about the Sun's changing motions, hoping to more accurately predict the bursts of energy they call space weather.
Due to the process of releasing high energy particles and magnetic fields, satellites on Earth are affected. Astronauts injured; The decline of radio communication lines, Power lines may be cut. The Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope will be a great companion to the Solar Orbiter (SolO) space observatory, which will launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida next week.
The Solar Orbiter (SolO), a European-American space observatory, will take the closest photograph of the Sun's surface from a distance of 42 million kilometers. The Solar Orbiter (SolO) space observatory will be able to reveal objects as small as 70 kilometers across. But it will have longer wavelengths than the Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope and will also bring samples from the Sun's atmosphere.