Dark Sun Sizzling
			
		
		
			Credit:  
TRACE Project, 
Stanford-Lockheed Institute for Space Research, 
NASA
		
		
			Is this our Sun?  Yes.  
Even on a normal day, our Sun is 
sizzling 
ball of 
seething hot 
gas.  
Unpredictably, regions of strong and tangled 
magnetic fields arise, causing 
sunspots and bright 
active regions.  
The Sun's surface bubbles as hot 
hydrogen gas streams along 
looping magnetic fields.  
These active regions channel gas along 
magnetic loops, usually falling back but sometimes 
escaping into the 
solar corona or out into space as the 
solar wind.
Pictured above is our Sun in three colors of 
ultraviolet light.  
Since only active regions emit significant amounts of energetic 
ultraviolet light, most of the Sun appears dark.  
The colorful portions glow spectacularly, pinpointing the Sun's hottest and 
most violent regions.  
Although the Sun is constantly changing, the rate of 
visible light it emits has been 
relatively stable 
over the past five billion years, allowing 
life to emerge on Earth.