sun theory
Coronal Heating: The topmost part of a star's atmosphere is called the corona. It is made of plasma. The sun's corona spans millions of kilometers into space and is located above the chromosphere. The best way to view it is during a total solar eclipse when it spills over the moon's black figure. When something is far away from a heating element here on Earth, say, for instance, a furnace, it begins to cool down because it's not close to that main heating source. But the sun does something totally different that is often posed as a mystery. The sun's visible surface is 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit hot. Moving away from the blaze ought to bring things under control, right, as it is farther away from the heating source. But it simply doesn't. Instead, the corona, the upper atmosphere of the sun, sizzles at millions of degrees, which is 200 to 500 times hotter than the roaring fire below. This complex process of keeping the corona extremely hot while also being far away from the sun's surface right below is shrouded in mystery. Some propose that the corona is a creation made by an advanced civilization that inhabits the sun, kind of working as a force field protecting them from other entities outside. Other theories suggest that the sun is its own living entity. March 2012 was the month when scientists believed that they saw an extraterrestrial spaceship or an unexplained orb flying around the sun. This stunned astronomers who were monitoring solar flares through their advanced telescopes at the time. This black sphere emitting black waves or lines was thought to have been recharging itself with the sun's energy, at least that's what the prominent conspiracy theory was at the time, as the black lines looked like they were attaching to something on the surface of the sun. Though NASA would confirm that it was most likely a magnetic bubble that formed due to a magnetic field that would eventually explode.
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