A detailed telescope photo of sun’s surface has been revealed people call it chikki:
National Science Foundation released never seen before images of the Sun’s turbulent surface. The Daniel K Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) on the summit of Haleakala, Maui in Hawaii, released the pictures that show details as small as 30 km across the sun, reported the BBC.
This is notable when set against the scale of our star, which has a diameter of about 1.4 million km and is 149 million km from Earth. The cell-like structures are approximately the size of the US state of Texas. They are convicting masses of hot, excited gas, or plasma.
The NSF’s Inouye Solar Telescope provides unprecedented close-ups of the sun’s surface, but ultimately it will measure the sun’s corona – no total solar eclipse required.
More: https://t.co/UsOrXJHaY1 #SolarVision2020 pic.twitter.com/DO0vf9ZzKC
— National Science Foundation (@NSF) January 29, 2020
The bright centers are where this solar material is rising; the surrounding dark lanes are the place where plasma is cooling and sinking.
As soon as the highest resolution image of the sun’s surface was released, the internet had many reactions to it that will keep you laughing:
I’m not trying to compete with the sexiness of the suns surface, but how many likes can the surface of my garlic bread get? https://t.co/hhgxToFzCC pic.twitter.com/HqE1beMjyo
— Midnight Palma (@MidnightPalma) January 30, 2020
Sun’s surface looks like chikky from India. pic.twitter.com/CAXgUUkPZn
— Kumar Shubham (@professor_WTAF) January 30, 2020
Is this the suns surface or a bowl of Golden Crisp? pic.twitter.com/9SmAxk5v21
— Dout Urameshi (@knowdout01) January 30, 2020
The surface of the sun looks like a bunch of un popped popcorn kernels pic.twitter.com/vDfH4tl9KO
— BakaBakaBakaBoi (@BakaBakaBoi) January 29, 2020
The most detailed image of the Sun’s surface we’ve captured is basically that of a low res Chikki. pic.twitter.com/vZUHh0ayGe
— Siddharth Panda (@realslimsiddy) January 30, 2020
OK, maybe you can mess with Texas, but definitely don’t mess with the Sun: https://t.co/PLQOOvEjcf pic.twitter.com/zpnVBL8Htx
— Corey S. Powell (@coreyspowell) January 29, 2020
That picture of the suns surface looks like caramel popcorn pic.twitter.com/ZdDImYjbEJ
— tails (@tails3isawesome) January 29, 2020
forbidden caramel corn https://t.co/SzwtvQZnpT
— (っ◔◡◔)っ2͎0͎2͎0͎ (@ChappellTracker) January 29, 2020
Here’s convection happening in a bowl of miso soup. Compare with gif above depicting THE FRICKIN’ SUN pic.twitter.com/SagHXqoBjr
— Katie Mack (@AstroKatie) January 29, 2020
OK, maybe you can mess with Texas, but definitely don’t mess with the Sun: https://t.co/PLQOOvEjcf pic.twitter.com/zpnVBL8Htx
— Corey S. Powell (@coreyspowell) January 29, 2020
Am I the only one who saw “The most detailed image of the Sun’s surface to date” and thought that it looks like Kappalandi mittai? pic.twitter.com/8h0qsE7XwM
— Anoop Menon (@godsonlymistake) January 30, 2020
why does my rice cake look like the most detailed image of the suns surface ? pic.twitter.com/lll8oKYjTk
— iliana (@ilianaxmendez) January 30, 2020