sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
If I had access to all the all the hi-res movies, it would be a lot easier to demonstrate, believe me.
All TRACE 171A (all iron ion) images of the limb show coronal loop and mass flow movement in the atmosphere something like this:
http://trace.lmsal.com/Public/Gallery/Images/movies/T171_991127.mov
If we can see that same movement of near the opaque limbs in SDO, and they consistently appear under the chromosphere/photosphere boundary, would that convince you that the transition region is under the photosphere?
No, I don't think so - but I'm still not positive I know what you're asking.
Ya, and do you understand what you're saying? How much difference would you expect to see between the wavelengths involved in those two images? Do you really think you're going to squeeze that lame argument hard enough to get 4800KM of difference?
Actually sol...
You'll need 6000km of distance to be consistent with LMSAL claim about the solar moss starting 1200KM *above* the photosphere.
Distance between what and what? Please remember - this is a 2D image of a 3D object. You can't convert lateral distance on the 2D image into distance in 3D without taking into account the trigonometry, as well as the optical depth.
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) and predicts absolutely nothing just makes it a joke. See the over 50 questions that Michael Mozina is incapable of answering.