Sunspots are regions on the solar surface that appear dark because they
are cooler than the surrounding photosphere, typically by about 1500 K (thus,
they are still at a temperature of about 4500 K, but this is cool compared to the
rest of the photosphere). They are only dark in a relative sense; a sunspot
removed from the bright background of the Sun would glow quite brightly.
Basic Features of Sunspots
The largest sunspots observed have had diameters of about 50,000 km, which
makes them large enough to be seen with the naked eye. Sunspots often come in
groups with as many as 100 in a group, though sunspot groups with more than
about 10 are relatively rare. There are well established methods for
measuring the
number of sunspots. Here, for example, is a
table giving the daily count of observed sunspots in
the year 1996.
Sunspots develop and persist for periods ranging from hours to months, and are
carried around the surface of the Sun by its rotation (a fact known to Galileo).
The images on this page
show a single sunspot and a complex sunspot group. A typical
sunspot consists of a dark central region called the umbra and somewhat
lighter surrounding region called the penumbra
A complex sunspot group.
The Solar Rotational Period
Historically, the first measurements of the period for solar rotation were made
by tracking sunspots as they appeared to move around the Sun. Galileo used this
method to deduce that the Sun had a rotational period of about a month.
Because the Sun is
not a solid body, it does not have a well defined rotational period. Modern
measurements indicate that the rotational period of the Sun is about 25 days near
its equator, 28 days at 40 degrees latitude, and 36 days near the poles. The
rotation is direct, that is, in the same sense of the motion of the
planets around the Sun.
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