An Astrophotographer captures the ‘clearest photo of the Sun’. It shows swirls and feather-type patterns.

  • Andrew McCarthy used 150,000 images of the sun as layers to create the photograph.
  • This photo has 300 Megapixels, which is 30 times larger than standard images.
  • You can see black holes formations in the most detailed view of this photograph.

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Astrologer claims that he has taken the ‘clearest ever picture of the sun’.

Andrew McCarthy used 150,000 photos of the glowing ball to show the incredible detail and intricate details of the largest star in the solar system.

On Instagram, the @cosmic_background photographer defines tiny craters, fiery ripples, and building space flare from the glowing space mass.

You can see all of it in the final 300-megapixel image, which is 30% larger than any standard 10-megapixel camera image.

Andrew McCarthy layered 150,000 individual pictures of the glowing ball of fire to convey the intricate stunning detail of the solar system's largest star

Andrew McCarthy used 150,000 photos of the glowing ball to show the incredible detail and intricate details of the largest star in the solar system.

The photographer, known as @cosmic-background on Instagram, defines the tiny craters and fiery ripples which emanate from the burning space mass, as well as a building space flare

Instagram user @cosmic-background defines the small craters of the space burning mass and the fiery ripples that emanate from it.

The human eye can see swirls, feather-type patterns, and mysterious black holes in the most detailed view.

In reality, the dark areas in these images were inverted by photography and are high-energy bright spots of the star burning.

This is an extremely difficult process that requires two filters and a special telescope.

The dark spots in the images are actually inverted by the photographic process and in reality are very bright high energy areas of the burning star

In reality, the dark areas in these images were actually inverted by photography and are high-energy bright spots of the burning star.

All can be seen within the huge final 300 megapixel image - 30 times bigger than a standard 10 megapixel camera image

You can see all of it in the 300-megapixel final image, which is 30% larger than any standard 10-megapixel camera image.

Andrew stated, “It’s not until I’m done processing an image that it actually looks like. This was a very unique one.

“I get so excited when I photograph the sun. It is fascinating because each day is different. 

“While the moon may be more indicative of the clearness of the sky, the sun can never be boring. That day was one of the best.

The sun is the star at the heart of the Solar System, a nearly perfect sphere of hot plasma, radiating energy. It has a diameter of 1.39 million km, and is 330 times the mass of the Earth. Three quarters of the star is made of hydrogen, followed by helium, oxygen, carbon, neon and iron

The Sun, the sun, is the center of the Solar System. A perfect sphere made of hot plasma and radiating heat, it’s the most prominent star. Its diameter is 1.39 million kilometers and its mass is about 330 times that of Earth. It is composed of hydrogen which makes up nearly three-quarters of its star, along with oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and iron.

The Sun formed from the gravitational collapse of matter in a large molecular cloud that gathered in the centre. The rest flattened into an orbiting disc that formed everything else

Gravitational collapse of material in large molecular clouds gathered at the centre led to the formation of the Sun. Everything else was formed by the rest of the mass, which became an orbiting disc.

The process is a difficult one and requires a specialist telescope with two filters, in order to prevent a fire, and the photographer going blind

It is difficult work and you will need a telescope that has two filters. This prevents a photographer from going blind and setting off a fire.

“To achieve extreme magnification, I used a modified telescope.

“Combined, these photos enabled me to see and feel the sun with incredible clarity.” Andrew lives in Arizona.

The star that is at the center of the Solar System’s Solar System is the sun. This stellar body of plasma and energy radiates heat, making it the perfect star. 

Its diameter is 1.39 Million km and its mass is 330x that of Earth. The star’s hydrogen makes up three quarters, with the rest made from oxygen, carbon and neon.

It’s a G-type main star sequence star, and it is often called a yellow dwarf. 

The gravitational collapse in matter that formed the Sun in a large, molecular cloud gathered at the centre. Rest became an orbiting disk that created everything else.

The sun: the basics 

The Sun is the central star of the Solar System. It’s a perfect sphere made of hot plasma that radiates energy.

Its diameter is 1.39 Million km and its mass is 330x that of Earth. 

Hydrogen makes up nearly three-quarters of the star, and is followed closely by hydrogen, helium oxygen, carbon, neon, iron, and oxygen.

It’s a G-type main star sequence star, and it is often called a yellow dwarf. 

From the gravitational collapse and accumulation of matter within a large molecular cloud, the Sun was formed. 

Rest became an orbiting disk that formed all the other things.

FACTS and FILES 

NameSun 

All known planets: Eight

Type Spectral: G2

Distance: 2.7×10^17 km

Mass: 1.9885×10^30 kg

Radius: 696,342 km

Luminosity: 3.828×10^26 W

Temperature: 9,929 F

Age: 4.6 trillion years  

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