
A corona (Latin, ' crown ') is an aura of plasma
that surrounds the sun and other celestial
bodies. The Sun's corona extends millions of
kilometres into space and is most easily seen
during a total solar eclipse, but it is also
observable with a coronagraph . The word
"corona" is a Latin word meaning "crown",
from the Ancient Greek κορώνη (korōnè,
“garland, wreath”).
The high temperature of the Sun's corona
gives it unusual spectral features, which led
some in the 19th century to suggest that it
contained a previously unknown element,
" coronium ". Instead, these spectral features
have since been explained by highly ionized
iron (Fe-XIV). Bengt Edlén , following the work
of Grotrian (1939), first identified the coronal
lines in 1940 (observed since 1869) as
transitions from low-lying metastable levels of
the ground configuration of highly ionised
metals (the green Fe-XIV line at 5303 Å, but
also the red line Fe-X at 6374 Å). These high
stages of ionisation indicate a plasma
temperature in excess of 1,000,000 kelvin , [1]
much hotter than the surface of the sun.
Light from the corona comes from three
primary sources, which are called by different
names although all of them share the same
volume of space. The K-corona (K for
kontinuierlich , "continuous" in German) is
created by sunlight scattering off free
electrons ; Doppler broadening of the reflected
photospheric absorption lines completely
obscures them, giving the spectral
appearance of a continuum with no absorption
lines. The F-corona (F for Fraunhofer) is
created by sunlight bouncing off dust
particles, and is observable because its light
contains the Fraunhofer absorption lines that
are seen in raw sunlight; the F-corona
extends to very high elongation angles from
the Sun, where it is called the zodiacal light .
The E-corona (E for emission) is due to
spectral emission lines produced by ions that
are present in the coronal plasma; it may be
observed in broad or forbidden or hot spectral
emission lines and is the main source of
information about the corona's composition.
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