Sun\n{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right" style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em"\n|+ Sun\n|-\n| colspan="2" align="center" | \n|-\n! bgcolor="#ffffc0" colspan="2" align="center" | Observation data\n|-\n! align="left" | Mean distance from Earth\n| 150,000,000 km(93,000,000 mi)\n|-\n! align="left" | Visual brightness (V)\n| −26.8m\n|-\n! align="left" | Absolute magnitude\n| 4.8m\n|-\n! bgcolor="#ffffc0" colspan="2" align="center" | Physical characteristics\n|-\n! align="left" | Diameter\n| 1,392,000 km\n|-\n! align="left" | Relative diameter (dS/dE)\n| 109\n|-\n! align="left" | Oblateness\n| ~9×10-6\n|-\n! align="left" | Surface area\n| 6.09 × 1012 km²\n|-\n! align="left" | Volume\n| 1.41 × 1027 m³\n|-\n! align="left" | Mass\n| 1.9891 × 1030 kg\n|-\n! align="left" | Relative mass to Earth\n| 333,400\n|-\n! align="left" | Density\n| 1.411 g/cm³\n|-\n! align="left" | Relative density to Earth\n| 0.26\n|-\n! align="left" | Relative density to water\n| 1.409\n|-\n! align="left" | Surface gravity\n| 274 m s-2\n|-\n! align="left" | Relative surface gravity\n| 27.9 g\n|-\n! align="left" | Escape velocity\n| 618 km/s\n|-\n! align="left" | Surface temperature\n| 5780 K\n|-\n! align="left" | Temperature of corona\n| 5 × 106 K\n|-\n! align="left" | Luminosity (LS)\n| 3.827 × 1026 J s-1\n|-\n! bgcolor="#ffffc0" colspan="2" align="center" | Orbital characteristics\n|-\n! align="left" | Period of rotation\n| \n|-\n| align="right" | At equator:\n| 27d 6h 36m\n|-\n| align="right" | At 30° latitude:\n| 28d 4h 48m\n|-\n| align="right" | At 60° latitude:\n| 30d 19h 12m\n|-\n| align="right" | At 75° latitude:\n| 31d 19h 12m\n|-\n! align="left" | Period of orbit around galactic centre\n| 2.2 × 108 years\n|-\n! bgcolor="#ffffc0" colspan="2" align="center" | Photospheric composition\n|-\n! align="left" | Hydrogen\n| 73.46 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Helium\n| 24.85 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Oxygen\n| 0.77 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Carbon\n| 0.29 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Iron\n| 0.16 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Neon\n| 0.12 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Nitrogen\n| 0.09 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Silicon\n| 0.07 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Magnesium\n| 0.05 %\n|-\n! align="left" | Sulfur\n| 0.04 %\n|}\nThe Sun (also called Sol) is the star in our solar system. The planet Earth and all of her sister planets, both the other terrestrial planets and the gas giants, orbit the Sun. Other bodies that orbit the Sun include asteroids, meteoroids, comets, Trans-Neptunian objects, and, of course, dust.
EIT304 instrument. 512x512 version. \nAnimation (980kMPEG). Courtesy SOHO(ESA&NASA)]]
See also\n* Astronomical twilight\n* Solar radiation\n* Solar radius\n* Solar energy\n* Solar wind\n** Aurora borealis\n** Aurora australis\n* Photosphere\n* Chromosphere\n* Corona\n* Airglow\n* Eclipse\n* Timeline of solar astronomy\n* Solar deity\n* DaystarExternal links\n* Current SOHO snapshots\n* Far-Side Helioseismic Holography from Stanford\n* NASA Eclipse homepage\n* Nasa SOHO (Solar & Heliospheric Observatory) satellite\n* Solar Sounds from Stanford \n* Spaceweather.com\nCategory:Solar system\nCategory:Stars \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nnah:Tonatiuh\n\n\n\n\nsimple:Sun\n\n\n\nzh-cn:太阳\nzh-tw:太陽 |
||||
"I am become death, shatterer of worlds." - Robert J. Oppenheimer (1904-1967) (citing from the Bhagavad Gita, after witnessing the world's first nuclear explosion) |
\n|-\n! bgcolor="#ffffc0" colspan="2" align="center" | Observation data\n|-\n! align="left" | Mean distance from Earth\n|
EIT304 instrument. 