The Sun: UNSEEN Images, What the Surface of the Star Looks Like (VIDEO)

The sun has published a series of new never-before-seen images thanks to a new ultra-high-performance telescope that photographed its surface up close for the first time.

Sun. has published images for the first time that only researchers have seen only recently after they managed to record for the first time the way the surface of the star that supports our life in the universe actually looks. Everything was possible thanks to the largest solar telescope that was created on Earth to analyze the Sun, and what we see in the video clip above confirms the fact that we have not yet learned anything about this star.

Sun. it seems to have a surface made up of a combination of cells that are in full motion, and what we see is much further than what many researchers thought about the star. The researchers who analyzed these first images claim that the new telescope brings a new era in terms of exploring the Sun, and this is because the technology used is much more advanced than any other used for any other type of telescope on Earth.

The Sun: UNSEEN Images, What the Surface of the Star Looks Like (VIDEO)

Sun. it has a lot of superheated plasma on its surface, and the unusual shape it takes is related to the way heat is transferred from inside the star to its outside. The superheated plasma rises towards the center of the cells visible on the surface of the Sun, it cools and sinks through their edges back to the interior, the process itself being known as one of convexity, and it happens constantly.

Sun. it will be constantly monitored to see how this process repeats, but also how it affects the sun's magnetic fields, another extremely important segment of research. Moreover, the telescope will have an extremely high importance to alert us about solar storms that could affect electronic devices, the warning time increasing from 48 minutes to 48 hours, so extremely long.

Sun. only now will some of its secrets begin to be revealed, and this while NASA and ESA will send a high-performance space probe to also analyze it much more closely.