The Sun Is the Most Perfect Naturally-Occurring Sphere in the Universe
Colin Lecher
at 06:30 AM 17 Aug 2012
Comments 0
<strong>STEREO Image of the Sun</strong>
STEREO Image of the Sun
IMAGE BY NASA
Science // 

After 50 years of research, we've discovered a strange, beautiful fact about our Sun: it's more perfectly round than anything else in the natural world. It's not the roundest in a certain category; it's just the roundest sphere there is. If it were a beach ball, The Guardian writes, it would be a hair's width away from complete perfection.

Most planets exhibit some sort of a bulge at their equator because of their rotations. Jupiter's spin, for example, makes it about 7 percent wider. So you'd naturally think the Sun shared some of those properties, but you'd be wrong - the bulge at the Sun's equator turned out to be relatively minuscule. The Sun is about 1.4 million kilometers across. The distortion at its equator? A mere 10 kilometers. The only thing we know of that's rounder is a manmade, artificial silicon sphere.

Until recently, Earth's atmosphere distorted our view in such a way that we couldn't get accurate measurements. Using instruments from Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory, scientists were finally able to. University of Hawaii's Jeffrey Kuhn, who led the team behind the measurements, told The Guardian that the observations were clues to the Sun's interior, which moves at different speeds in different areas. An accurate measurement can help us understand how those speeds are distributed.

[The Guardian]

RELATED
NASA's Flying Telescope Captures the Death Sighs of a Sun
NASA's plane-with-a-hole-in-it has been busy making infrared astronomy observations, and just captured a quiet, sad sight - the feeble last pulsations of a dying star. Astronomers ... more >
The Sunspots That Kicked Off This Week's Solar Storm May Be Just Warming Up
That gigantic solar flare that lashed out toward Earth on Saturday is "the geomagnetic storm that just won't go away," the NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) in Boulder,... more >
 
0 COMMENTS

Leave a comment

Please provide your details to leave a comment.

The fields marked with (*) are required.


Display Name: *
Email *:
Comments *:
(Max 750 characters)
Characters remaining:
*

(letters are not case-sensitive)
Captcha

Enter the text in the image above
 
Editor's Picks
BY Clay Dillow POSTED 21.05.2013 | 0 COMMENTS
BY Dan Nosowitz POSTED 14.05.2013 | 0 COMMENTS